Session Information
Session Type: ACR Concurrent Abstract Session
Session Time: 4:30PM-6:00PM
Background/Purpose:
Childhood primary small vessel CNS vasculitis (SVcPACNS) is an increasingly recognized inflammatory brain disease with high morbidity and mortality mandating an elective brain biopsy to confirm the diagnosis. The aim of the study was to systematically review biopsies of SVcPACNS patients and inflammatory and epilepsy controls and to determine characteristic features defining the diagnosis of SVcPACNS.
Methods:
A previously developed, standardized brain biopsy review instrument was applied to consecutive full thickness brain biopsies of pediatric cases and controls collected at a single center. Standardized stains including Hematoxyllin & Eosin, histochemistry of immune cell subsets plus electron microscopy. Nine North American expert neuropathologists were blinded reviewed to the patient’s presentation, diagnosis and therapy. All biopsies were de-identified and scored independently by two reviewers. Univariate analyses compared variable between groups; correspondence analysis determined the multi-dimensional relationship of histological variables and patient diagnoses.
Results:
A total of 31 brain biopsy specimens of children with SVcPACNS, 12 with epilepsy and 11 with non-vasculitic inflammatory brain disease controls were included. Correspondence analyses revealed distinct clusters of the three diagnoses based on dimensions of location of infiltrate and subtype/ severity of inflammation. Significant histological characteristics found to set apart SVcPACNS from controls included angiocentric (p<0.01) and/or perivascular infiltrates (p=0.04), evidence of endothelial cell activation (p<0.01) and inflammation in both grey and white matter (p<0.01). The infiltrate was found to be primarily T-cell mediated (CD3+ 86%, CD8+ 90%) only 27% of SVcPACNS biopsies had evidence of B cells. Features reported in adult PACNS including granulomas, necrosis or fibrin deposits were absent in all biopsies. Leptomeningeal inflammation was non-diagnostic.
Conclusion:
Distinct histological features were identified on brain biopsies of SVcPACNS and may help defining the disease. These were absent in biopsies of children with epilepsy and non-vasculitic inflammatory brain diseases and allow for the development of diagnostic criteria.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Twilt M, Nabavi Nouri M, Tyrrell PN, Dropol A, Sheikh S, Hawkins C, Benseler S. Diagnosing Childhood Small Vessel CNS Vasculitis [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2015; 67 (suppl 10). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/diagnosing-childhood-small-vessel-cns-vasculitis/. Accessed .« Back to 2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting
ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/diagnosing-childhood-small-vessel-cns-vasculitis/