Neuroinflammatory Disease following Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Infection in Children

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_68825DCBADC1
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Neuroinflammatory Disease following Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Infection in Children
Journal
J Pediatr
Author(s)
Aubart M., Roux C. J., Durrleman C., Gins C., Hully M., Kossorotoff M., Gitiaux C., Levy R., Moulin F., Debray A., Belhadjer Z., Georget E., Kom T., Blanc P., Wehbi S., Mazeghrane M., Tencer J., Gajdos V., Rouget S., De Pontual L., Basmaci R., Yacouben K., Angoulvant F., Leruez-Ville M., Sterlin D., Rozenberg F., Robert M. P., Zhang S. Y., Boddaert N., Desguerre I.
ISSN
1097-6833 (Electronic)
0022-3476 (Print)
ISSN-L
0022-3476
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2022
Volume
247
Pages
22-28 e2
Language
english
Notes
Aubart, Melodie
Roux, Charles-Joris
Durrleman, Chloe
Gins, Clarisse
Hully, Marie
Kossorotoff, Manoelle
Gitiaux, Cyril
Levy, Raphael
Moulin, Florence
Debray, Agathe
Belhadjer, Zahra
Georget, Emilie
Kom, Temi
Blanc, Philippe
Wehbi, Samer
Mazeghrane, Mustapha
Tencer, Jeremie
Gajdos, Vincent
Rouget, Sebastien
De Pontual, Loic
Basmaci, Romain
Yacouben, Karima
Angoulvant, Francois
Leruez-Ville, Marianne
Sterlin, Delphine
Rozenberg, Flore
Robert, Matthieu P
Zhang, Shen-Ying
Boddaert, Nathalie
Desguerre, Isabelle
eng
2022/05/17
J Pediatr. 2022 Aug;247:22-28.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2022.05.018. Epub 2022 May 14.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe neurologic, radiologic and laboratory features in children with central nervous system (CNS) inflammatory disease complicating severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. STUDY DESIGN: We focused on CNS inflammatory diseases in children referred from 12 hospitals in the Paris area to Necker-Sick Children Reference Centre. RESULTS: We identified 19 children who had a history of SARS-CoV-2 infection and manifest a variety of CNS inflammatory diseases: encephalopathy, cerebellar ataxia, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder, or optic neuritis. All patients had a history of SARS-CoV-2 exposure, and all tested positive for circulating antibodies against SARS-CoV-2. At the onset of the neurologic disease, SARS-CoV-2 PCR results (nasopharyngeal swabs) were positive in 8 children. Cerebrospinal fluid was abnormal in 58% (11/19) and magnetic resonance imaging was abnormal in 74% (14/19). We identified an autoantibody co-trigger in 4 children (myelin-oligodendrocyte and aquaporin 4 antibodies), representing 21% of the cases. No autoantibody was found in the 6 children whose CNS inflammation was accompanied by a multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children. Overall, 89% of patients (17/19) received anti-inflammatory treatment, primarily high-pulse methylprednisolone. All patients had a complete long-term recovery and, to date, no patient with autoantibodies presented with a relapse. CONCLUSIONS: SARS2-CoV-2 represents a new trigger of postinfectious CNS inflammatory diseases in children.
Keywords
Autoantibodies, *COVID-19/complications, Humans, Myelin-Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein, Neuroinflammatory Diseases, SARS-CoV-2, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
Pubmed
Create date
07/02/2025 19:24
Last modification date
08/02/2025 8:27
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