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Neuromuscular Junction Disorders David A. Simpson, D.O., F.A.C.N., M.S. Fellow, American Association of Neuromuscular and Electrodiagnostic Medicine Michigan Institute for Neurological Disorders Director MDA Clinic, Farmington Hills, Michigan Director MDA/ALS Center, Farmington Hills, Michigan Anatomy and Physiology of Neuromuscular Junction Fusion of acetycholine vesicles with the post-synaptic membrane. www.78stepshealth.us/plasma-membrane/neurons-synapases and communication,html (with permission). Three types of Ach receptors at the NMJ (pre-junctional, post-junctional, and extrajunctional. www.anesthesiauk.com/article.aspx?articleid=228 (with permission). www.neuromuscular.wust.edu/mudist/dag2.htm (with permission). Acetylcholine receptor. www.163.178.103.176/TemalG/Grupos1/GermanT1/GATP17/a8.htm (with permission) LRP4, agrin, MuSK and the formation of acetylcholine receptor. www.elifesciences.org/content/elite/2/e00220/F11.large.jpg (with permission) LRPs regulate signaling at the cell surface. (A) Formation of the neuromuscular junction is regulated by LRP4, which self-associates to form a binding site for agrin at the surface of myotubes. The binding of agrin to LRP4 then promotes interaction of LRP4 with muscle-specific kinase (MusK), resulting in activation of the kinase. MuSK then triggers events required to form the postsynaptic apparatus on muscle cells, including the clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). Intracellular pathways activated by agrin for AChR clustering. From: Development 2010;137;7:1017-1033 (with permission). Classification of Neuromuscular Disorders Congenital Neuromuscular Syndromes Adult Neuromuscular Junction Defects • Presynaptic • • Lambert Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome Toxins/Venoms • • • • • Tick paralysis Black Widow Spider Scorpion Cation-Induced • • • Tetanus Magnesium Calcium Primary Nerve/Muscle Disorder • • • • Peripheral neuropathies Motor Neuron Disorders Multiple Sclerosis Primary Myopathies Adult Neuromuscular Junction Defects • Post-synaptic • • Myasthenia gravis Medication Related • • • • • Tetracycline Oxytetracycline D-penicillamine Anticholinesterase d-Tubocurare (curare-like compounds) Adult Neuromuscular Junction Defects • Pre- and post-synaptic • • Anticonvulsants Antibiotics • • • • • • • Polymyxins Aminoglycosides • • • Streptomycin Neomycin Kanamycin Amino Acid Derivative • • Lincomycin Clindamycin Procainamide Quinidine Lithium Beta-adrenergic Blockers Myasthenia Gravis Symptoms/signs of myasthenia gravis. Unilateral lid ptosis. http://www.genelsaglikbilgileri.com/myasthenia-gravis/ (with permission) Extraocular muscle impairment in myasthenia gravis. Normal neuromuscular junction and myasthenia gravis with simplification of post-synaptic membrane and acetylcholine receptor, binding and blocking antibodies. http://www.listdisase.wordpress.com/2011/10/03/myasthenia-gravis/ Damage to neuromuscular junction occurs through complement-mediated lysis of endplate region, accelerated degradation of AChR (cross-linking), and blockade of AChR. http://flipper.diff.org/app/items/info/4314 (with permission) Damage to neuromuscular junction occurs through complement-mediated lysis of endplate region, accelerated degradation of AChR (cross-linking), and blockade of AChR. http://www.californialaserspine.com/ourservices/myasthenia-gravis (with permission) The immunopathogenesis of myasthenia gravis involves the production of high-affinity anti-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibodies whose synthesis is modulated by and dependent on AChR-specific T-cells that are activated after presentation of AChR peptides by antigenpresenting cells (APC). Autoantibodies reduce the number of functional AChRs mainly by complement-mediated lysis of postsynaptic membrane and by cross-linking of AChRs, causing enhanced endocytosis and degradation. Direct blockade of the acetylcholine-binding site on the AChR is a less frequent mechanism. From: Continuum Lifelong Learning 2009;15(1):37 (with permission). This electron micrograph shows part of a motor end plate in untreated human autoimmune myasthenia gravis. Reprinted with permission from Engel AG, Tsujihata M, Lindstrom JM et al. The motor end plate in myasthenia gravis and experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis. A quantitative ultrastructural study [1976] Ann NY Acad Sci, 274:60-79. Repetitive nerve stimulation at 3 Hz revealing a significant electrodecremental response between responses one and 4. Immediate post-exercise reveals facilitation and repair. 2 minute and 6 minutes revealed more significant electrodecremental response (posttetanic exhaustion). http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1140870-overview (with permission) Single fiber EMG revealing normal jitter. Single fiber EMG revealing significantly abnormal jitter in a patient with myasthenia gravis. Acetycholine receptor antibody levels/million people in various ages. http://www.mgacharity.org/archive/mganews/0103-01.htm (with permission) Acetylcholine receptor antibodies binding to the acetylcholine receptor. http://www.abcam.com/Nicotinic-Acetylcholine-Receptor-beta-3-antibodyCarboxyterminal-end-ab41175.html Treatment of Myasthenia Gravis Introduction Introduction • Evolved substantially since the mid-twentieth century when acetylcholinesterase inhibitors represented the mainstay of treatment • The adoption of chronic immune suppression (IS) treatment has significantly improved the prognosis for many MG patients Introduction • Along with the observation that mortality in MG has declined significantly in parallel with adoption of long-term IS therapies, a recent review of over 1000 patients treated with IS for at least 1 year showed that all of forms of MG benefited from IS, with remission rates ranging from 85% in ocular MG to 47% in thymomatous MG Introduction • However, as a rare and rather heterogeneous disorder with spontaneous relapses and remissions, prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trials are difficult to perform in MG, and few therapies have undergone rigorous trials Introduction • With an expanding armamentarium of treatment options and newly-recognized immunological subtypes, the adage that therapy in MG must be individualized has never been more relevant • The overall treatment objective is to restore normal function with an absolute minimum of treatment side effects Introduction • Formulation of an appropriate management strategy requires consideration of clinical and immunological characteristics of MG and the risks for treatment complications • Relevant clinical characteristics include the distribution (ocular, bulbar, generalized) and severity (mild, moderate, severe, crisis) of myasthenic weakness and the impact on function Introduction • Immunological issues that influence treatment include the presence of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) or muscle-specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) antibodies and the presence of thymoma • Risks for treatment complications relate to age, gender, medical comorbidities, the ability of the patient to obtain the medication and to comply with drug dosing schedules, and toxicity monitoring Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEis) impair hydrolysis of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction and increase the probability for successful neuromuscular transmission • As symptomatic treatment for MG, AChEis may elicit temporary improvement in strength, but do not retard the autoimmune attack on the neuromuscular endplate Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • Clinical responses to AChEis are often incomplete and variable over time and in different muscle groups • No controlled trials using long-acting AChEis have been performed in MG despite the frequent clinical use of these agents in MG for nearly seven decades Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • AChEis are useful as initial therapy for ocular or mild, generalized MG, and as an adjunct for patients receiving immunotherapy who have residual symptoms • The main advantage of AChEis is a lack of long-term side effects • Disadvantages include the transient and often incomplete improvement in myasthenic symptoms, frequent dosing schedule, and muscarinic side effects Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • Pyridostigmine bromide (Mestinon) is more widely used than neostigmine bromide (Prostigmin) due to fewer gastrointestinal side effects • A long-acting form of pyridostigmine bromide (Mestinon Timespan 180 mg) is absorbed irregularly and therefore tends to be overdosed • It may be useful in rare patients for bedtime dosing to reduce early morning weakness, though severe weakness on awakening is very rare in MG Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • AChEis are started at a low dosage and gradually titrated upward to avoid dose-dependent, though transient, muscarinic side effects including nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping, diarrhea, sweating increased bronchial secretions, lacrimation, diaphoresis, muscle fasciculations, miosis, and occasionally bradycardia Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • The gastrointestinal symptoms may be managed with glycopyrollate (Robinul), diphenoxylate hydrochloride with atropine (Lomotil), and loperamide hydrochloride (Imodium) • The initial oral dose or oral pyridostigmine is 30mg 3-4 times per day (i.e. every 4 hours) Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • The dosage schedule should be tailored to treat the most symptomatic muscle weakness and gradually advance to symptom relief or to a maximum dosage of 90 mg three to four times daily • A few patients tolerate higher doses (120mg every 4 hours while awake), but overdosing may elicit increased weakness Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • If weakness increases despite higher pyridostigmine dosages, no further increase in the dosage should be made, and IS treatment should be considered • Improved muscle strength is usually apparent 20-30 minutes after dosing with a peak effect around 45 minutes, and the improved strength may last up to 4 hours Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • Dose frequency is usually every 4-8 hours or 3-4 times per day • Contraindications to AChEis include mechanical intestinal or urinary obstruction, reactive airway disease, and hypersensitivity to cholinesterase inhibitors Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors • A cholinergic crisis may be precipitated by excessive dosage of AChEis in the setting of myasthenic exacerbation • In cholinergic crisis, weakness increases due to depolarization blockade • Beyond weakness indistinguishable from MG, prominent muscarinic signs develop • Excessive oropharyngeal and bronchopulmonary secretions present an additional risk for aspiration with airway obstruction Corticosteroids Corticosteroids • Corticosteroids (CSa) have wide effects on the immune system and may ameliorate autoimmune disease by reducing inflammatory cytokine transcription • Prednisone elicits rapid and significant improvement or remission in most MG patients • In a large retrospective trial, most patients experienced significantly improved strength after 2-3 weeks of treatment and 80% experienced marked improvement or remission Corticosteroids • The mean time to reach marked improvement or remission was 3.1 months, and the median time to maximum benefit was between 5-6 months • Prednisone is an appropriate initial treatment for patients with ocular or generalized myasthenia who fail to achieve a satisfactory response to AChEis Corticosteroids • Although CSs are well known to be rapidly effective in most patients, the primary disadvantages of CSs are numerous, predominantly dose- and duration-related side effects • Risks for side effects include baseline hypertension, glucose intolerance, diabetes, obesity, glaucoma, osteoporosis, and affective thought disorders • An alternative IS therapy may be considered in such patients Corticosteroids • With the high-dose treatment strategy, prednisone is dosed at 0.75-1.0 mg/k/day or 60-80 mg/day • If sustained improvement is documented at a clinical reassessment after 2-4 weeks, the dose is modified to 60mg alternating with 40 mg every other day x 2 weeks, then 60mg alternating with 20mg every other day x 2 weeks, then 60mg every other day x 1 month, then decrease by 5 mg weekly (i.e. 55mg qod x 1 week, then 50mg qod x 1 week….) Corticosteroids • All dosage reductions should be preceded by clinical assessment of MG • Some patients do not tolerate alternate day dosing due to variations in myasthenia, mood swings, or difficulty glycemic control Corticosteroids • If symptoms or signs recur at any point, the taper should be stopped • Myasthenic relapses may be delayed for 2-3 weeks after prednisone dose reductions • Although rare patients are successfully tapered off prednisone, most patients will require indefinite treatment with 10-20 mg on alternate days unless another IS agent is used Corticosteroids • CSs can also be started at a low dosage and slowly increased to reduce risk for corticosteroid-related exacerbation • However, the onset of improvement is unpredictable and can be significantly delayed, and the risk for corticosteroid-related exacerbation is eliminated Corticosteroids • CS side effects are numerous and include glucose intolerance, hypertension, obesity, osteoporosis, cushingoid features, acne, skin friability, cataracts, glaucoma, gastric ulceration, juvenile growth suppression, sodium retention, fluid retention, potassium loss, mood swings, and personality change Corticosteroids • Purified protein derivative (PPD) skin testing should be considered to screen for tuberculosis prior to beginning treatment with CSs or any long-term IS therapy • During CS treatment, blood pressure, weight, serum electrolytes, and serum glucose are monitored • Patients are encouraged to maintain a high-protein, low-carbohydrate, low-fat, low-sodium diet Corticosteroids • Calcium supplementation at 1500mg/day and vitamin D is recommended in order to minimize bone mineral loss • In postmenopausal women, a baseline bone density is performed and repeated every 6 months • If bone density decreases, treatment with a biphosphonate is considered Corticosteroids • Corticosteroid-related myasthenic exacerbations may be precipitated by initial treatment with CSs and result in transient, but potentially serious increases in weakness in up to 15% of MG patients • The increased weakness begins within 7-10 days after beginning CSs and may last for up to 1 week before strength improves • Corticosteroids-causes depolarization, which eventually leads to a reduction in the release of ACh as well as altering MEPPs and intracellular potassium concentrations Corticosteroids • Once improvement begins, further worsening related to CSs is rare • Patients at high risk for serious exacerbations have moderate or severe bulbar and/or generalized MG • As such patients may lapse into myasthenia crisis, they should be observed in an inpatient setting for the first 10 days of CS treatment Corticosteroids • Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) may be performed in patients at high risk prior to beginning CSs in order to circumvent an exacerbation and to achieve more rapid clinical improvement Azathioprine Azathioprine • azathioprine (AZA) is metabolized by the liver to 6mercatopurine, an antimetabolite that interferes with nucleotide synthesis and blocks T-lymphocyte proliferation • AZA is most commonly used as a steroid-sparing agent in MG, but it is also used as initial therapy in patients who are at risk for CS side effects Azathioprine • In retrospective studies, AZA was effective in 70-90% of MG patients • A prospective, randomized, double-blind study comparing prednisolone monotherapy to prednisolone combined with AZA demonstrated a more durable benefit, along with reduced treatment failures, side effects, and CS maintenance doses in the combined AZA treatment group Azathioprine • AZA may be more effective and better tolerated when used in combination with CS, and many MG patients taking azathioprine require a lower dose of adjunctive CSs to maintain control of MG Azathioprine • Although it has a favorable side-effect profile when compared to high dose CS therapy, a 4-8 month delay to improved strength limits the usefulness of AZA as an initial treatment in patients with symptomatic MG • In addition, there is a very small, but increased risk for lymphoma and other cancers with long term use Azathioprine • AZA is initially dosed at 50 mg/day, and the dose is increased by 50mg/day each week to a target dose of 2-3 mg/kg/day • Relative contraindications include history of AZA idiosyncratic reactions, malignancy, anemia, leucopenia, thrombocytopenia, and thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) deficiency Azathioprine • dose-dependent side effects include myelosuppression with leucopenia and macrocytic anemia, toxic hepatitis, and alopecia • a rare, idiosyncratic, hypersensitivity pancreatitis may occur • serum lipase and amylase assays should be considered for patients with persistent abdominal pain Azathioprine • a more common idiosyncratic reaction involving fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and sometimes rash may occur in 10-15% of patients during the first 3 weeks of treatment • the reaction resolves within 1 day of stopping AZA and recurs with drug rechallenge • AZA is a potential teratogen and women of childbearing potential should use effective contraception Azathioprine • Surveillance for AZA toxicity should include blood count and liver transaminases weekly for the first month, then monthly for the first year of treatment, then every 3-4 months thereafter if the dosage remains stable • Erythocyte macrocytosis is expected and acceptable within the therapeutic dosage range Azathioprine • If the white blood cell (WBC) count falls below 3500/mm3, the dosage should be reduced, and if the WBC falls below 3000/mm3, AZA should be discontinued • Screening with TPMT deficiency is suggested prior to beginning treatment with AZA and should be considered in patients developing leucopenia on AZA • Concurrent use of allopurinol increases 5-mercatopurine levels by inhibition of xanthine oxidase with increased immunosuppressive and myelosuppressive effects Mycophenolate Mofetil Mycophenolate Mofetil • Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) selectively suppresses T and B lymphocyte proliferation by blocking lymphocyte purine synthesis • Although several retrospective case series of MMF suggested efficacy in MG, two recent randomized, controlled trials failed to demonstrate additional benefit of MMF beyond prednisone (20mg daily as initial IS therapy) in MG Mycophenolate Mofetil • Since many experts remain convinced of the effectiveness of MMF, the conflict between the negative-controlled trial findings and the positive retrospective data may owe to study design issues including an unexpectedly positive response to prednisone, a relatively short period of study, and a study population with relatively mild MG Mycophenolate Mofetil • In light of a favorable side effect profile, MMF is used as an initial therapy in patients who are at risk for CS side effects • The onset of benefit occurs around 2-5 months, which is somewhat earlier than observed with AZA treatment (approximately 4-8 months) Mycophenolate Mofetil • The standard dosage for MMF is 1000-1500 mg twice daily • Higher doses are associated with myelosupression and blood counts should be checked periodically as surveillance for myelosupression • Diarrhea, abdominal pain, and nausea are occasionally observed but rarely require discontinuing the medication Mycophenolate Mofetil • Probenecid, acyclovir, and gancylovir may increase the effective level of mycophenolate due to reduced renal tubular excretion • Concurrent use with AZA, another purine antagonist, may result in untoward IS and myelosupression • MMF is teratogenic and contraindicated in pregnancy • Women of childbearing potential on MMF must use two effective forms of contraception Cyclosporine Cyclosporine • Cyclosporine (CyA) disrupts calcineurin signaling with inhibition of interleukin-2 production and T-cell proliferation • A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of CyA in steroiddependent MG demonstrated significant improvement in CyA treatment group • In a long-term retrospective study of patients taking CyA, 96% of patients demonstrated clinical improvement with CyA treatment and 95% were able to taper or discontinue CSs Cyclosporine • Although effective, CyA use in MG has been limited by nephrotoxicity and numerous drug interactions • CyA is therefore most often used in refractory, generalized myasthenia gravis and as a steroid-sparing agent in patients who fail treatment with AZA and MMF • With serum levels in a therapeutic range, improved strength is generally observed within the first 2 months of treatment an maximum improvement occurs after about 6 months Cyclosporine • CyA is administered at 5 mg/kg/day in 2 daily dosages given 12 hours apart • The desired serum trough level is 100-150 g/L • Higher serum trough levels are associated with nephrotoxicity • Serum trough CyA levels, creatinine, and blood pressure should be monitored every other week until a stable dosage is achieved, then every 4-8 weeks thereafter • After stable improvement is achieved, many patients can experience sustained benefit at lower CyA maintenance doses of 3 mg/kg/day or less Cyclosporine • The most common side effects include hypertension, nephrotoxicity, tremor, hirsutism, gingival hypertrophy, headaches, nausea, and increased risk of malignancy • Contraindications include uncontrolled hypertension, renal failure, pregnancy, and malignancy Cyclosporine • CyA is associated with numerous drug interactions that may result in nephrotoxicity, accumulation of drugs in circulation, and increases or reductions in serum CyA levels • Concurrent use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in combination with CyA may elicit azotemia • Hyperkalemia may occur when CyA is used with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, and myopathy may occur when CyA is used with statins Cyclophosphamide Cyclophosphamide • cyclophosphamide is an alkylating agent that has been used in a limited fashion for MG, most often in selected cases of severe, refractory generalized disease • in a small controlled trial, monthly, intravenous, pulsed doses • cyclophosphamide (500mg/m2) improved strength and reduced the CS requirement in patients with refractory, generalized MG Cyclophosphamide • in a few cases, cyclophosphamide has also been administered at high doses (50mg/kg) with marrow ablation and rescue with durable improvement in MG • cyclophosphamide side effects include myelosuppression, hemorrhagic cystitis, infection, and increased cancer risk • owing to its toxicity and risk profile, cyclophosphamide should be reserved for the rare patient with severe, highly refractory, generalized myasthenia Tacrolimus Tacrolimus • Like CyA, tacrolimus (FK506) inhibits calcineurin with reduced interleukin-2 production resulting in T-Cell suppression • Although thought to be less nephrotoxic than CyA, hyperglycemia due to transcriptional inhibition of insulin has been problematic in transplant populations treated with tacrolimus Tacrolimus • There are several reports of effectiveness in MG including a randomized, unblended trial • At present, tacrolimus may be a consideration for refractory, generalized MG patients for steroid sparing who fail to respond to AZA, MMF, and CyA • The typical dosing range for MG is 3-5 mg/day Plasma Exchange Plasma Exchange • TPE is an effective short-term treatment for myasthenic exacerbations or crises, to prepare symptomatic patients for thymectomy or other surgical procedures, and to prevent steroid-induced exacerbation in patients with moderate to severe oropharyngeal or generalized MG • TPE may also be used chronically in the rare patient with MG refractory to all other treatments Plasma Exchange • During TPE, plasma containing AChR antibodies is removed and replaced by albumin or by fresh frozen plasma • Most centers perform a series of five to six exchanges of 2-3 liters every other day Plasma Exchange • Significantly improved strength in a majority of patients in myasthenic crisis with TPE is well documented in several series, and is supported by a National Institutes of Health Consensus Statement • • Onset of improvement is variable, but generally occurs after two or three exchanges Following a TPE series, improvement in strength is temporary and may last several weeks at best, unless an immune modulator is used Plasma Exchange • Many complications of TPE are associated with large-bore, central venous catheters, such as venous thrombosis, infection, and pneumothorax, or are associated with the large volume shifts occurring during the procedure, such as hypotension, bradycardia, and congestive heart failure • Wherever feasible, TPE should be performed via peripheral access using antecubital veins to reduce morbidity Intravenous Gammaglobulin Intravenous Gammaglobulin • Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) is an effective, short-term immunotherapy for myasthenic exacerbations or crises and for surgical preparation • It may also be used as chronic therapy for selected patients with refractory disease, or as an alternative to TPE for individuals with poor venous access Intravenous Gammaglobulin • The mechanism for improved MG likely relates to down regulation of AChR antibodies and/or induction of anti-idiotypic antibodies Intravenous Gammaglobulin • Several controlled trials have demonstrated the effectiveness of IVIg in MG • A recent controlled trial comparing TPE (1 liter plasma volume exchange times five exchanges) with IVIg (1 gm/kg daily on 2 consecutive days) revealed comparable efficacy in response rates and duration of improvement in patients with moderate to severe MG Intravenous Gammaglobulin • IVIg is administered as a 10% solution, and the standard dosage is 2 gm/kg over 2-5 days • Treatment over a greater number of days reduces the risk for volume overload or for solute-induced renal failure • A standard infusion protocol should be followed allowing for frequent monitoring of vital signs by experienced staff Intravenous Gammaglobulin • Patients with renal insufficiency or diabetic nephropathy are at risk for acute tubular necrosis with renal failure due to large solute load associated with the infusions • In the setting of cardiomyopathy or valvular heart disease, the large volume associated with the infusions may precipitate congestive heart failure Intravenous Gammaglobulin • Idiosyncratic side effects are similar to those observed in blood transfusions such as headache, chills, fever, and malaise and may be controlled by pre-treatment with acetaminophen and diphenhydramine • Patients may develop severe vascular headaches with nausea and vomiting and sterile meningitis • Volume overload with congestive heart failure and renal failure may develop in susceptible patients • High-infusion rates may be associated with thrombosis and stroke Thymectomy Thymectomy • Since Blalock’s early demonstration of remissions following thymectomy in non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis, thymectomy procedures have been widely performed to reduce remissions in MG • To date, there have been no prospective, randomized studies to access the technique or effectiveness of thymectomy in non-thymomatous MG Thymectomy • In an evidence-based literature review of thymectomy in nonthymomatous MG, there was no Class I studies documenting disease remission or improvement • • alth0ugh there are several Class 4 studies documenting remission or improvement current evidence based reviews conclude that this association could be due to either thymectomy or differences in study populations Thymectomy • It was therefore recommended that in non-thymomatous MG, thymectomy be considered an option to increase the probability of remission or improvement • A large international multi-center trial is currently being conducted to assess the effect of thymectomy in non-thymomatous MG Thymectomy • The response to thymectomy is not immediate and may be delayed for several years • Patients with moderate to severe, generalized or bulbar MG should undergo pre-operative TPE or IVIg infusions to improve strength Thymectomy • Thymectomy is rarely performed after the age of 60 years due to increased surgical risk • It is thought that thymectomy is more effective when performed early in the course of MG, though this may owe to the nonlinear remission rate in MG with remissions more likely to occur early in the disease Thymectomy • Whether patients with non-thymomatous ocular MG should undergo thymectomy remains controversial • Clinical series of patients with MuSK-positive myasthenia gravis raise doubt about the benefits of thymectomy in this patient subpopulation, and there have been no reports to date of thymoma in MuSK-positive myasthenia gravis Thymectomy • though more invasive, the combined transternal-transcervical technique is considered by many to be optimal, as it permits the widest surgical exposure for complete removal of thymic tissue that may be widely distributed in the mediastinum and neck • The future role for video-assisted, robotic procedures for thymectomy remains undefined, though less invasive procedures promise reduced perioperative morbidity along with the possibility for complete removal of thymic tissue Thymectomy • the only absolute indication for thymectomy is the presence of thymoma, which is observed in 10% to 20% of patients with MG • surgical removal should be recommended in all patients with thymoma, understanding that thymectomy is not an emergent or urgent procedure, and should be undertaken only after treatment of MG is optimized Emerging Therapies Emerging Therapies • Although the current chronic IS therapies for MG are effective, they exert broad and relatively nonspecific effects on the immune system • TPE and IVIg also provide effective, though transient, immune modulation with non-antigen specific effects • Several novel biological agents with highly focused and specific effects on the immune system have shown promise in MG Emerging Therapies • Rituximab is a chimeric, monoclonal antibody directed against the CD20 B cell surface marker that depletes circulating B lymphocytes • Rituximab has been utilized for treatment of B-cell lymphomas and was recently approved for use in rheumatoid arthritis Emerging Therapies • Findings emerging in case reports and small series suggest that rituximab is effective in some cases of refractory, generalized AChR antibody-positive MG • Rituximab may be particularly effective in refractory MuSK MG and may induce durable remissions lasting for many months Emerging Therapies • The dosing strategies for rituximab treatment of lymphoma and rheumatoid arthritis differ, and the optimal dosing strategy for MG remains undefined • Infusions may be associated with fever, chills, nausea, and hypotension • Though very rare, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy represents the most serious potential complication of rituximab therapy Emerging Therapies • Eculizumab is a humanized, monoclonal antibody that blocks formation of terminal complement membrane attack complex by inhibiting cleavage of C5 • It is currently approved for use in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria • In a recent small, controlled phase 2 trial, 86% of patients exhibited significant improvement and over 50% exhibited a marked improvement in refractory generalized MG Emerging Therapies • Belimumab, a human monoclonal antibody against B lymphocyte stimulator was recently approved for use in systemic lupus erythematosus, and is currently undergoing clinical trials in refractory generalized MG Therapeutic Strategy for Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia Therapeutic Strategy for Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia • First line-pyridostigmine, prednisone, thymectomy • Second line-azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil • Third line-cyclosporine, tacrolimus • Fourth line-plasma exchanges (serial), IVIg (serial), rituximab, cyclophosphamide • Fifth line-total lymphoid irradiation, stem cell transplant • 30mg to 90 mg every 4-5 hours • 40 mg/d to 80 mg/d Pyrdiostigmine Prednisone Thymectomy Azathioprine Mycophenolate mofetil IVIg Cyclosporine Tacrolimus Plasma exchange Rituximab Cyclophosphamide Total lymphoid irradiation Stem cell replacement • 2mg/kg/d to 3 mg/kg/d • 2 gm/d to 3 gm/d • 2 gm/kg over 4-5 days • 4 mg/kg/d-5 mg/kg/d in two divided doses • 2 mg/d to 3 mg/d • 1 to 3 exchanges every 2 to 4 weeks • 375 mg/m2 weekly x 4 • 500mg/m2 IV monthly Treatment of Other Forms of Myasthenia • Ocular myasthenia-acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, prednisone • MuSK antibody syndrome-prednisone, mycophenolate mofetil, plasma exchange, rituximab • Myasthenia gravis in pregnancy-corticosteroids, plasma exchange, and IVIg Evidenced-Based Guideline: Intravenous Immunoglobulin in the Treatment of Neuromuscular Disorders [Report of the Therapeutics and Technology Assessment Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology] Evidenced-based guideline: Intravenous immunoglobulin in the treatment of neuromuscular disorders [Report of the Therapeutics and Technology Assessment Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology] • Conclusions • • Based on one Class 1 study, IVIg is probably effective in treating patients with MG Evidence is insufficient to compare the efficacy of IVIg and plasmapharesis in treating MG • Recommendations • IVIg should be considered in the treatment of MG (Level B) Evidenced-Based Guideline: Intravenous Immunoglobulin in the Treatment of Neuromuscular Disorders [Report of the Therapeutics and Technology Assessment Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology • Clinical context • This recommendation was based on studies involving primarily moderately or severely affected patients • The benefits and risks of this medication should be weighed carefully in patients with mild MG • Further studies of IVIg efficacy in MG are warranted due to the few randomized trials and small study size to date Consensus statement: The Use of Intravenous Immunoglobulin in the Treatment of Neuromuscular Conditions [Report of the AANEM AD HOC Committee] Consensus statement: The Use of Intravenous Immunoglobulin in the Treatment of Neuromuscular Conditions [Report of the AANEM AD HOC Committee] • Class I evidence supports the prescription of IVIg to treat patients with Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS), CIDP, multifocal motor neuropathy, refractory exacerbations of myasthenia gravis, Lambert-Eaton syndrome, dermatomyositis, and stiff person syndrome Retrospective Review MDA/MIND (1991-2013): 224 patients with MG Incidence Incidence • Generalized myasthenia: 197 patients (88%) • Ocular myasthenia: 18 patients (8%) • Ocular-bulbar-Anti-MuSK antibody positive: 9 patients (4%) • Myasthenic crisis: 38 patients (17%) Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia • First line • Pyridostigmine: 197 patients (100%) • IVIg: 167 patients (84.7%), primary treatment alone-87 patients (52.1 %) • Prednisone-30 patients (15.3%)-0% as primary treatment alone • Thymectomy-thymoma-25 patients (13%) Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia • Second line • Mycophenolate mofetil (MM)added to IVIg + AChI: 80 patients (47.9%) • Azathoprine added to prednisone + AChI-25 patients (85.0%) • MM added to prednisone + AChI-5 patients (15%) Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia • Third line • Of the 80 patients treated with IVIg and MM, 6 patients (7%) had MM discontinued, and cyclosporine instituted • Of the 25 patients treated with prednisone and azathioprine, 2 patients (6%) treated with cyclosporine • Of the 6 patients treated with IVIg and cyclosporine, 2 patients placed on tacrolimus • Of the 2 patients treated with prednisone and cyclosporine, one patient had cyclosporine stopped and switched to tacrolimus Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia • Fourth line • Of the 2 patients treated with IVIg and tacrolimus, IVIg and tacrolimus discontinued, two patients treated with recurrent plasma exchanges followed by rituxin • Of the patient treated with prednisone + tacrolimus, patient failed to respond, prednisone weaned, tacrolimus discontinued, and PE + rituxin tried Treatment of Generalized Myasthenia • Fifth line • Of 3 patients on PE + rituxin, 1 patient had lymphoid radiation and stem cell replacement (Northwestern University) Tiers of treatment for myasthenia gravis-DAS (1991-2013) Pyridostigmine IVIg Prednisone Thymectomy Mycophenolate mofetil Azathioprine Cyclosporine •30mg -120 mg every 4 hours while awake; 180mg SR if patient awakens with weakness •0.5 gm/kg IBW daily x 4,then 1.0 gm/kg IBW every 2 weeks x 3, then 1.0gm/kg IBW every 3 weeks x 2, then 1.0 gm/kg IBW every 4 weeks and maintain •60mg oral daily x 1 month, then 60mg alternating with 40mg every other day x 2 weeks, then 60mg alternating with 20mg every other day x 2 weeks, then 60 mg every other day x 1 month, then 55mg every other day x 1 week, then 50mg every other day x 1 week, then 45......(decreasing by 5 mg per week to a dose that maintains cliinical symptoms • 2 gm/d to 3 gm/d • 50mg daily x 1 week, then 50mg bid x 1 week, then 50mg tid • 4 mg/kg/d to 5mg/kg/d divided in two doses • 2mg/d to 3mg/d Tacrolimus Plasma exchange (serial treatments) Rituximab Cyclophosphamide Total lymphoid irradiation Stem cell transplant • 2-3 liter exchanges every 2-4 weeks • 325 mg/m2 weekly x 4, repeat if needed in 6 months • 500 mg/m2 IV montly Tiers of treatment for myasthenia gravis-Current Recommendations (2014) Treatment of Ocular Myasthenia Treatment of Ocular Myasthenia • Pyridostigmine-27 patients treated, 3/27 (11.1%) able to be maintained alone • Prednisone + pyridostigmine • 10mg-24/27 patients treated, 18 (75%) improved and controlled • 20mg-of 6 patients not improved on Pred 10mg and AChI, 5/6 controlled on Pred 20mg + AChI • 30mg-patient which was not controlled on Pred 20mg + AChI was controlled Treatment of Ocular Myasthenia-DAS protocol Anti-MuSK Antibody Syndrome Anti-MuSK Antibody Syndrome • pyridostigmine alone-0/38 patients controlled • non-crisis (34/38 patients): Prednisone + MM-29/34 patients controlled (85.2%) • of the 5 patients not in crisis and not controlled on Pred + MM, 3 responded to addition of 1-2 PE Anti-MuSK Antibody Syndrome • crisis (4/38 patients) • PE 1-2 exchanges + Pred + MM (3/4 patients controlled) (96%) • Of the 2 patients, not presenting in crisis,that did not respond to Pred + MM + PE, addition of rituxin controlled symptoms • Of the 1 patient, presenting in crisis, and no response to PE (up to 5 exchanges), and on Pred (60mg) + MM (2000mg), rituxin of benefit Treatment of anti-MuSK MG-DAS protocol Rituximab 325 mg/m2 weekly x 4 weeks, can repeat in 6 months Plasma exchange 2-3 liters 1-2 exchanges Mycophenolate 1000mg bid, can increase if needed to 2500mg x 1 week, then if needed 3000mg daily Prednisone 60mg daily x 1 month, then 60mg alternating with 40mg qod, then 60 mg alternating with 20mg qod, then 60mg qod x 1 month, then decrease by 5 mg weekly (i.e. 55mg qod x 1 week, then 50mg qod x 1 week...to lowest dose along with mycophenolate . Anti-MuSK MG usually non-responsive to anti-cholinesterase medication, IVIg, azathioprine. Treatment of Mysathenic Crisis Treatment of Myasthenic Crisis (DAS protocol) ER • ABC (ABG, Chest xray, FVC) • Intubate if evidence of respiratory muscle fatigue with increasing tachypna and declining tital volumes, hypoxemia, hypercapnea, and difficulty with secretions • If not intubated, FVC and negative inspiratory force (NIF) every 4 hours; intubate if FVC below 1 liter and NIF 20 cm H2O or less • Discontinue cholinesterase medication ICU ICU • • • • • Treat infections if present (i.e. pneumonia, UTI, bacteremia/septicemia) Plasma exchanges 2-3 liters qod x 5; replace volume/volume with albumin; start PE ASAP IVIg of similar efficacy to PE, but prefer PE in MG crisis Swittch as many of the other medications that patient was taking prior to admission to IV route if possible Insert NG tube for enteral feedings and for other medicaations that cannot be administered IV (i.e.mycophenolate, imuran) • Do not rush to get patient off mechanical ventilation • Allow at least 2 plasma exchanges , which will result in more successful attempts at extubation ICU ICU ICU • Weaning trials should begin after pateints demonstrate a clear trend of improved respiratory muscle strength (usually at a vital capacity greater than 15 ml/kg) • The trial should be terminated if the patient exhibits any sign of respiratory fatigue (tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoriesis, or agitation • • • • • Once determined to be ready for weaning , restart cholinesterase inhibitors at 30mg every 4 hours Extubate Continue to monitor FVC and NIF Once respiratory status determined to be stable and no difficulty with secretions, titer up the cholinesterase medication (i.e. 60 mg every 4 hours ) Discontinue NG tube if no dysphagia and secretions controlled • After 3rd plasma exchange, start IV Solumedrol 125mg q 6 hours (if still on ventilator); 60mg oral prednisone if off the ventilator ICU/Step downtelemetry Step down/telemetry • Continue prednisone 60mg daily and anti-cholinesterase medication 60mg every 4 hours • Finish plasma exchanges for a total of 5 • PT/OT • Discharge to home if fullly stable • Discharge to subacute rehab if needed Regular floor