Objectives: To determine if myasthenia gravis (MG) with antibodies to MuSK is a distinct subgroup of seronegative MG. Methods: We assayed antibodies to muscle specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) in 55 MG patients who had no antibodies to acetylcholine receptors and looked for the specific phenotype, comparing clinical features of anti-MuSK positive and anti-MuSK negative MG patients. Results: MG with anti-MuSK antibodies was characterised by a striking prevalence of female patients (15 women, two men). Age at onset ranged from 22 to 52 years, with 70.6% of patients presenting at ,40 years of age. The majority of patients (82.4%) had prevalent involvement of facial and bulbar muscles. One third of them did not respond well to anticholinesterase drugs. Steroid immunosuppression was effective in eight patients (44.4%). Nine patients underwent thymectomy; six of these had no thymus pathology, while three had a hyperplastic thymus. At the end of the observation period, six (35.3%) patients were in remission, five (29.4%) improved, four (23.6%) did not change, and two (11.7%) had died. Conclusions: MG patients with antibodies to MuSK have characteristic clinical features that are different from features of the remaining seronegative MG patients. This emphasises the predictive value of antiMuSK antibody analysis in seronegative MG patients.
This is the first long-term follow-up of patients who discontinued natalizumab. We did not observe a clinical, radiographic, or immunologic rebound phenomenon after discontinuation of natalizumab therapy.
Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disease associated with thymic pathologies, including hyperplasia. In this study, we investigated the processes that may lead to thymic overexpression of the triggering Ag, the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Using microarray technology, we found that IFN-regulated genes are more highly expressed in these pathological thymic tissues compared with age- and sex-matched normal thymus controls. Therefore, we investigated whether proinflammatory cytokines could locally modify AChR expression in myoid and thymic epithelial cells. We found that AChR transcripts are up-regulated by IFN-γ, and even more so by IFN-γ and TNF-α, as assessed by real-time RT-PCR, with the α-AChR subunit being the most sensitive to this regulation. The expression of AChR protein was increased at the cytoplasmic level in thymic epithelial cells and at the membrane in myoid cells. To examine whether IFN-γ could influence AChR expression in vivo, we analyzed AChR transcripts in IFN-γ gene knock-out mice, and found a significant decrease in AChR transcript levels in the thymus but not in the muscle, compared with wild-type mice. However, up-regulation of AChR protein expression was found in the muscles of animals with myasthenic symptoms treated with TNF-α. Altogether, these results indicate that proinflammatory cytokines influence the expression of AChR in vitro and in vivo. Because proinflammatory cytokine activity is evidenced in the thymus of myasthenia gravis patients, it could influence AChR expression and thereby contribute to the initiation of the autoimmune anti-AChR response.
Seronegative myasthenia gravis (MG) presents a serious gap in MG diagnosis and understanding. We applied a cell based assay (CBA) for the detection of muscle specific kinase (MuSK) antibodies undetectable by radioimmunoassay. We tested 633 triple-seronegative MG patients' sera from 13 countries, detecting 13% as positive. MuSK antibodies were found, at significantly lower frequencies, in 1.9% of healthy controls and 5.1% of other neuroimmune disease patients, including multiple sclerosis and neuromyelitis optica. The clinical data of the newly diagnosed MuSK-MG patients are presented. 27% of ocular seronegative patients were MuSK antibody positive. Moreover, 23% had thymic hyperplasia suggesting that thymic abnormalities are more common than believed.
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