Repository logo
 

Anti-collapsin response mediator protein 5 encephalitis masquerading as a low-grade brain tumour.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Cope, Thomas E 
Breen, David P 
Chawda, Sanjiv 
Cifelli, Alberto 

Abstract

A 71-year-old woman presented acutely with seizures; her MRI suggested a low-grade glioma of the right temporal lobe. Over the preceding 18 months, she had developed progressive limb chorea and orofacial dyskinesia. Examination showed a predominantly amnestic cognitive profile. Initial investigations were normal, but later she was found to have antibodies to collapsin response mediator protein 5 (also called CV2). Her symptoms and neuroimaging abnormalities gradually improved without treatment. Four months later, surveillance imaging with (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron-emission tomography revealed a lesion confirmed by biopsy as a TX, N2, M0 small-cell lung cancer. This case is unusual for the strikingly unilateral neuroimaging abnormalities, which led to an initial misdiagnosis, and the spontaneous symptomatic improvement without treatment. In retrospect, the co-occurrence of paraneoplastic chorea, limbic encephalitis and neuropathy in the presence of an occult lung tumour make this almost a 'full house' of symptoms associated with antibodies to collapsin response mediator protein 5. It underlines the importance in clinical reasoning of avoiding the cognitive errors of premature closure and anchoring.

Description

Keywords

NEUROIMMUNOLOGY, PARANEOPLASTIC SYNDROME, Aged, Brain, Brain Neoplasms, Encephalitis, Female, Humans, Hydrolases, Limbic Encephalitis, Microtubule-Associated Proteins, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Semaphorin-3A

Journal Title

Pract Neurol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1474-7758
1474-7766

Volume Title

16

Publisher

BMJ