key: cord-0053063-pbm6pdil authors: Kamate, Mahesh; Ritesh, B. R.; Garg, Divyani; Sharma, Suvasini title: Do All Children With Autoimmune Encephalitis Need Aggressive Immunotherapy? date: 2020-11-20 journal: Indian Pediatr DOI: 10.1007/s13312-020-2054-9 sha: 6e7186cf5a5ef423d8497a0ed69ab9228253fd78 doc_id: 53063 cord_uid: pbm6pdil nan Autoimmune encephalitis is increasingly being recognized in children in India, and the recent review was therefore timely [1] . Many centers have reported that autoimmune encephalitis as a group is more common than encephalitis caused by any single etiogical agent like virus/bacteria [2] . They usually have an acute to subacute poly-symptomatic presentation [3] . Prompt immunotherapy in time gives good neurological outcomes in most of them. As antibody testing results takes few days, many clinico-laboratory criteria have been proposed for diagnosis of early possible/probable and seronegative autoimmune encephalitis so that treatment can be started pending the results [4] . This puts the pediatrician under pressure to start immunomodulation after common infectious causes are ruled out. Which drugs to use for immunomodulation is not clear from the literature. Though many authors and guidelines advocate use of methylprednisolone pulse therapy (MP) with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) as the initial modality of treatment, it is not clear whether they should be used simultaneously or sequentially [3] . If sequentially, after how many days of methylprednisolone therapy should IVIG be used is also not clear. Whether IVIG should be used in all or on the basis of clinical severity or response to MP is also unclear. Like Guillain-Barre syndrome and many other diseases, there is a spectrum of severity of autoimmune encephalitis and all children may not need aggressive treatment with both MP and IVIG. While milder ones may be self-limiting, the mild to moderately severe ones may need just 2-3 cycles of MP and the severe ones may need more than one agent and chronic immunomodulation for longer duration. Most of the milder forms of autoimmune encephalitis may not reach the tertiary VOLUME 57 __ NOVEMBER 15, 2020 CORRESPONDENCE care centers also and these cases may be missed from the series of tertiary care centers. While working in a medical college situated in a district place, we have managed six cases of anti-NMDAR autoimmune encephalitis (antibody confirmed) with poly-symptomatic presentation in the last four years. Four of them responded to just 3-6 monthly cycles of MP while only two (presented to us more than 4 weeks after onset) had to be given either IVIG or rituximab after methylprednisolone because of lack of response to MP in one week. Most of them could not afford IVIG/ rituximab, and received only MP. They showed good clinical response. None of the children who received MP have had any relapse (duration of follow-up: 6 month-4 years). We want to suggest that all children with anti-NMDAR antibody encephalitis do not need aggressive immunomodulation with MP, IVIG and other agents. Many of them may just respond to 3-6 doses of MP alone. However more studies including milder cases from peripheral centers are needed to generate robust evidence on this aspect. A qualitative report on exploratory data on the possible emotional/behavioral correlates of Covid-19 lockdown in 4-10 years children in Italy Struggling to breathe: A qualitative study of children's wellbeing during lockdown in Spain Early impact of COVID-19 lockdown on children's sleep: A four-week longitudinal study Compliance and psychological impact of quarantine in children and adolescents due to COVID-19 pandemic Autoimmune encephalitis in children: An update The frequency of autoimmune N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor encephalitis surpasses that of individual viral etiologies in young individuals enrolled in the California Encephalitis Project Management of antibody-mediated autoimmune encephalitis in adults and children: literature review and consensus-based practical recommendations Clinical approach to the diagnosis of autoimmune encephalitis in the pediatric patient Autoimmune encephalitis in children: An update Treatment and prognostic factors for long-term outcome in patients with anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis: An observational cohort study Clinical experience and laboratory investigations in patients with anti-NMDAR encephalitis Autoimmune encephalitis in children and adolescents Treatment strategies for autoimmune encephalitis We thank the readers for their interest in our publication [1] . Several expert recommendations for treatment for autoimmune encephalitis are available but there is no uniform standardized approach to therapy. However, the degree of aggressiveness of therapy needed may often be clinically guided by certain prognostic factors in an individual patient. Additionally, second-line agents such as rituximab or cyclophosphamide are used when first-line agents (steroids, intravenous immunoglobulin or plasmapheresis) fail. In a cohort of 577 patients with anti-NMDAR encephalitis, of whom 211 were children, 94% underwent first-line therapy/tumor removal, and 53% improved within 4 weeks. Most patients improved with immunotherapy, with 81% living independently two years after the diagnosis [2] . In this cohort, predictors of favorable outcome (including in 177 of 211 children) were early initiation of treatment and lack of intensive care unit (ICU) admission. Hence, authorities recommend escalation to second-line therapy if there is lack of significant improvement on first-line therapy in 10-14 days in anti-NMDAR encephalitis, especially among patients admitted to the ICU [3] . However, this brisk escalation may not be warranted for other autoimmune encephalitis and clinicians may wait longer before introducing second-line therapy [4] .While steroids are definitively therapeutic in this condition, there are certain issues with their use. Often, it is difficult to differentiate infectious causes of encephalitis from autoimmune encephalitis, and steroid initiation may be delayed. Additionally, the immunological effects of steroids are much more on T-cells compared to B-cells, and since autoimmune encephalitis is antibody-mediated largely, whether steroids alone would be as effective in all cases of autoimmune encephalitis is uncertain [5] .However, as the authors note, there are no clear guidelines on how frequently to repeat steroid dosing and the dosing interval is usually dictated by severity of the disease and the response of the child to therapy, including relapses. Indeed, all children may not warrant aggressive immunotherapy and it is better to individualize treatment rather than the 'one-size-fitsall' approach.