Case report on severe myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease relapse after ectopic pregnancy and laparoscopic medical abortion: relevance of peripheral inflammation for demyelinating disease activity
Smertinaite L., Selin K., Vaitiniemi R., Balevicius R., Kollia E., Granberg T., Leite MI., Palace J., Blad H., Karrenbauer VD.
BackgroundMyelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease (MOGAD) is a rare neurological condition. Tubal ectopic pregnancy is an important cause of maternal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Regular pregnancy has a disease-modifying effect on MOGAD, with an increased relapse rate postpartum. Still, there are neither case reports nor cohort studies on abortions and ectopic pregnancy as a disease-modifying event for MOGAD.Materials and methodsThis is a case report on a severe MOGAD relapse after ectopic pregnancy and laparoscopic abortion.DiscussionFor the first time we described that elevated interleukin-1 (IL-1), which was found in cerebrospinal fluid in the current case may be pathogenetically related to ectopic pregnancy. Rituximab (anti-CD20 treatment), downregulated IL-1 and TNF-alfa inflammatory pathways thus is an appropriate drug of choice to treat relapse. Cytokines secreted during ectopic pregnancy could play a disease-modifying role in multiple sclerosis and Guillian-Barré syndrome.ConclusionThe first case report of a MOGAD severe relapse after ectopic pregnancy and laparoscopic abortion which resolved with rituximab treatment.