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17-03-2024 | Lambert-Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome | Original Communication

Dysautonomia in anti-Hu paraneoplastic neurological syndromes

Authors: Macarena Villagrán-García, Antonio Farina, Joaquín Arzalluz-Luque, Lucia Campetella, Sergio Muñiz-Castrillo, Marie Benaiteau, Elise Peter, Pauline Dumez, Valentin Wucher, Maroua Dhairi, Géraldine Picard, Marie Rafiq, Dimitri Psimaras, Véronique Rogemond, Bastien Joubert, Jérôme Honnorat

Published in: Journal of Neurology

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Abstract

Background and objectives

Dysautonomia has been associated with paraneoplastic neurological syndrome (PNS)-related mortality in anti-Hu PNS, but its frequency and spectrum remain ill-defined. We describe anti-Hu patients with dysautonomia, estimate its frequency, and compare them to patients without dysautonomia.

Methods

Patients with anti-Hu antibodies diagnosed in the study centre (1990–2022) were retrospectively reviewed; those with autonomic signs and symptoms were identified.

Results

Among 477 anti-Hu patients, 126 (26%) had dysautonomia (the only PNS manifestation in 7/126, 6%); gastrointestinal (82/126, 65%), cardiovascular (64/126, 51%), urogenital (24/126, 19%), pupillomotor/secretomotor (each, 11/126, 9%), and central hypoventilation (10/126, 8%). Patients with isolated CNS involvement less frequently had gastrointestinal dysautonomia than those with peripheral (alone or combined with CNS) involvement (7/23, 30% vs. 31/44, 70% vs. 37/52, 71%; P = 0.002); while more frequently central hypoventilation (7/23, 30% vs. 1/44, 2.3% vs. 2/52, 4%; P < 0.001) and/or cardiovascular alterations (18/23, 78% vs. 20/44, 45% vs. 26/52, 50%; P = 0.055). Median [95% CI] overall survival was not significantly different between patients with (37 [17; 91] months) or without dysautonomia (28 [22; 39] months; P = 0.78). Cardiovascular dysautonomia (HR: 1.57, 95% CI [1.05; 2.36]; P = 0.030) and central hypoventilation (HR: 3.51, 95% CI [1.54; 8.01]; P = 0.003) were associated with a higher risk of death, and secretomotor dysautonomia a lower risk (HR: 0.28, 95% CI [0.09; 0.89]; P = 0.032). Patients with cardiovascular dysautonomia dying ≤ 1 year from clinical onset had severe CNS (21/27, 78%), frequently brainstem (13/27, 48%), involvement.

Discussion

Anti-Hu PNS dysautonomia is rarely isolated, frequently gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and urogenital. CNS dysfunction, particularly brainstem, associates with lethal cardiovascular alterations and central hypoventilation, while peripheral involvement preferentially associates with gastrointestinal or secretomotor dysautonomia, being the latest more indolent.
Literature
Metadata
Title
Dysautonomia in anti-Hu paraneoplastic neurological syndromes
Authors
Macarena Villagrán-García
Antonio Farina
Joaquín Arzalluz-Luque
Lucia Campetella
Sergio Muñiz-Castrillo
Marie Benaiteau
Elise Peter
Pauline Dumez
Valentin Wucher
Maroua Dhairi
Géraldine Picard
Marie Rafiq
Dimitri Psimaras
Véronique Rogemond
Bastien Joubert
Jérôme Honnorat
Publication date
17-03-2024
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Journal of Neurology
Print ISSN: 0340-5354
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1459
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-024-12278-4