Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein Autoimmunity: A French Cohort Study.

2021 
OBJECTIVES To report the clinical, biological, imaging features, and the clinical course of a French cohort of patients with glial fibrillar acidic protein (GFAP) autoantibodies. METHODS We retrospectively included all patients tested positive for GFAP antibodies in the cerebrospinal fluid, by immunohistochemistry and confirmed by cell-based assay using cells expressing human GFAPα, since 2017, from two French referral centers. RESULTS We identified 46 patients with GFAP antibodies. Median age at onset was 43 years, and 65% were men. Infectious prodromal symptoms were found in 82%. Other auto-immune diseases were found in 22% of patients, and coexisting neural autoantibodies in 11%. Tumors were present in 24%, and T cell dysfunction in 23%. The most frequent presentation was subacute meningoencephalitis (85%) with cerebellar dysfunction in 57% of cases. Other clinical presentation included myelitis (30%), visual (35%) and peripheral nervous system involvement (24%). MRI showed perivascular radial enhancement in 32%, periventricular T2 hyperintensity in 41%, brainstem involvement in 31%, leptomeningeal enhancement in 26%, and reversible splenial lesions in 4 cases. 33/40 patients had a monophasic course, associated to a good outcome at last follow-up (Rankin Score≤2: 89%), despite a severe clinical presentation. Adult and pediatric features are similar. Thirty-two patients were treated with immunotherapy. 11/22 patients showed negative conversion of GFAP antibodies. INTERPRETATION GFAP auto-immunity is mainly associated with acute/subacute meningoencephalomyelitis with prodromal symptoms, for which tumors and T cell dysfunction are frequent triggers. The majority of patients followed a monophasic course with a good outcome.
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