Autoimmune Encephalitis
Diagnosis
A review of clinical approaches to diagnosis of autoimmune encephalitis 140
- Diagnostic criteria for definite autoimmune limbic encephalitis (all 4 criteria must be met)
1) Subacute onset (rapid progression in less than 3 months) of working memory deficits, seizures, or psychiatric symptoms suggesting involvement of the limbic system
2) Bilateral brain abnormalities on FLAIR MRI highly restricted to the medial temporal lobes (or on FDG-PET)
3) At least one of the following:
- a. CSF pleocytosis (white blood cell count more than 5 cells / mm)
- b. EEG with epileptic or slow-wave activity involving the temporal lobes
4) Reasonable exclusion of alternative causes
- Diagnostic criteria for possible autoimmune encephalitis (all 3 criteria must be met) 140
1) Subacute onset (rapid progression in less than 3 months) of working memory deficits (short-term memory loss), altered mental status (decreased or altered level of consciousness, lethargy, or personality change), or psychiatric symptoms
2) At least one of the following:
- a. New focal CNS findings
- b. Seizures not explained by a previously known seizure disorder
- c. CSF pleocytosis (white blood cell count of more than 5 cells / mm)
- d. MRI features suggestive of encephalitis (hyperintense signal on FLAIR highly restricted to one or both medial temporal lobes (limbic encephalitis), or in multifocal areas involving grey matter, white matter, or both compatible with demyelination or inflammation)
3) Reasonable exclusion of alternative causes
- Diagnostic criteria for autoantibody-negative but probable autoimmune encephalitis (all 4 criteria must be met) 140
1) Rapid progression (less than 3 months) of working memory deficits (short-term memory loss), altered mental status, or psychiatric symptoms
2) Exclusion of well-defined syndromes of autoimmune encephalitis (e.g., typical limbic encephalitis, Bickerstaff’s brainstem encephalitis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis)
3) Absence of well characterized autoantibodies in serum and CSF, and at least 2 of the following criteria:
- a. MRI abnormalities suggestive of autoimmune encephalitis
- b. CSF pleocytosis, CSF-specific oligoclonal bands or elevated CSF IgG index, or both
- c. Brain biopsy showing inflammatory infiltrates and excluding other disorders (e.g., tumor)
4) Reasonable exclusion of alternative causes