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SLEEP - Article Abstract

Volume : 32
Issue : 08
Pages : 979-983



RAPID PUBLICATION
Elevated Anti-Streptococcal Antibodies in Patients with Recent Narcolepsy Onset

Adi Aran, MD1; Ling Lin, MD, PhD1; Sona Nevsimalova, MD2; Giuseppe Plazzi, MD3; Seung Chul Hong, MD4; Karin Weiner, PhD1; Jamie Zeitzer, PhD1; Emmanuel Mignot, MD, PhD1

1Center for Sleep Sciences and Department of Psychiatry, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA; 2Department of Neurology, Charles University in Prague, 1st Faculty of Medicine and General Teaching Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic; 3University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; 4Department of Psychiatry, St. Vincent’s Hospital, The Catholic University of Korea, Suwon, Korea



Study Objectives: Narcolepsy-cataplexy has long been thought to have an autoimmune origin. Although susceptibility to narcolepsy, like many autoimmune conditions, is largely genetically determined, environmental factors are involved based on the high discordance rate (~75%) of monozygotic twins. This study evaluated whether Streptococcus pyogenes and Helicobacter pylori infections are triggers for narcolepsy.
Design: Retrospective, case-control.
Setting: Sleep centers of general hospitals.
Participants: 200 patients with narcolepsy/hypocretin deficiency, with a primary focus on recent onset cases and 200 age-matched healthy controls. All patients were DQB1*0602 positive with low CSF hypocretin-1 or had clear-cut cataplexy.
Measurements and Results: Participants were tested for markers of immune response to β hemolytic streptococcus (anti-streptolysin O [ASO]; anti DNAse B [ADB]) and Helicobacter pylori [Anti Hp IgG], two bacterial infections known to trigger autoimmunity. A general inflammatory marker, C-reactive protein (CRP), was also studied. When compared to controls, ASO and ADB titers were highest close to narcolepsy onset, and decreased with disease duration. For example, ASO ≥ 200 IU (ADB ≥ 480 IU) were found in 51% (45%) of 67 patients within 3 years of onset, compared to 19% (17%) of 67 age matched controls (OR = 4.3 [OR = 4.1], P < 0.0005) or 20% (15%) of 69 patients with long-standing disease (OR = 4.0 [OR = 4.8], P < 0.0005]. CRP (mean values) and Anti Hp IgG (% positive) did not differ from controls.
Conclusions: Streptococcal infections are probably a significant environmental trigger for narcolepsy.
Keywords: Narcolepsy, autoimmune, post-streptococcal, Anti Streptolysin O (ASO); Anti DNAse B (ADB), helicobacter pillory

Citation: Aran A; Nevsimalova S; Plazzi G; Hong SC; Weiner K; Zeitser J; Mignot E. Elevated anti-streptococcal antibodies in patients with recent narcolepsy onset. SLEEP 2009;32(8):979-983.


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