Trephine
AboutSpecialtiesPricingLoading...

Copyright © 2024 Trephine. All rights reserved. The content of this site is intended for health care professionals.

TREPHINE

Terms Of UsePrivacy Policy

Nature reviews. NeurologyReview

02 May 2025

Autoimmune encephalitis-associated epilepsy.

Abstract

Autoimmune encephalitis (AE), defined by clinical criteria and its frequent association with neural autoantibodies, often manifests with seizures, which usually stop with immunotherapy. However, a subset of encephalitic conditions present with recurrent seizures that are resistant to immunotherapy.

Three primary neurological constellations that fall within this subset are discussed in this Perspective: temporal lobe epilepsy with antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase, epilepsy in the context of high-risk paraneoplastic antibodies, and epilepsy following adequately treated surface antibody-mediated AE.

These entities all share a common mechanism of structural injury and potentially epileptogenic focal neural loss, often induced by cytotoxic T cells. Recently, we have proposed conceptualizing these conditions under the term autoimmune encephalitis-associated epilepsy (AEAE).

Here, we discuss the new concept of AEAE as an emerging field of study.

We consider the clinical characteristics of patients who should be investigated for AEAE and highlight the need for judicious use of traditional epilepsy therapeutics alongside immunotherapeutic considerations that are of uncertain and incomplete efficacy for this group of disorders.

Last, we discuss future efforts needed to diagnose individuals before structural epileptogenesis has superseded inflammation and to develop improved therapeutics that target the specific immunological or functional disturbances in this entity.

COI Statement

Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

References:

  • Fisher, R. S. et al. Epileptic seizures and epilepsy: definitions proposed by the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) and the International Bureau for Epilepsy (IBE). Epilepsia 46, 470–472 (2005).
  • Eeg-Olofsson, O., Prchal, J. F. & Andermann, F. Abnormalities of T-lymphocyte subsets in epileptic patients. Acta Neurol. Scand. 72, 140–144 (1985).
  • Aarli, J. A. & Fontana, A. Immunological aspects of epilepsy. Epilepsia 21, 451–457 (1980).
  • Karpiak, S. E. Jr., Bowen, F. P. & Rapport, M. M. Epileptiform activity induced by antiserum to synaptic membrane. Brain Res. 59, 303–310 (1973).
  • Mihailović, L. T. & Cupić, D. Epileptiform activity evoked by intracerebral injection of anti-brain antibodies. Brain Res. 32, 97–124 (1971).

Article info

Journal issue:

  • Volume: not provided
  • Issue: not provided

Doi:

10.1038/s41582-025-01089-4

More resources:

Nature Publishing Group

Full Text Sources

Paid

Share: