Background: Treatment of opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS) has historically involved corticosteroids and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) for a duration of 6-12 months or longer. This study evaluated whether a brief upfront immunomodulatory therapy protocol with rituximab reduces the duration of OMS therapy without adversely affecting OMS outcomes.
Procedure: Retrospective chart review was performed for consecutive children diagnosed with OMS from 2006 to 2019 at The Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto, Canada). Children treated within 3 months of diagnosis with a treatment protocol involving pulse methylprednisolone (3-5 days, followed by an oral steroid taper), IVIG and/or plasma exchange, and rituximab (protocol group, n = 7) were compared to a historical group treated primarily with prednisone and IVIG (n = 8).
Results: The duration of corticosteroid treatment was shorter in the protocol (median 4.5 [range 3-12] months) compared to that in the historical group (median 21.5 [range 6-70] months, P = .005), and subjects in the protocol group received fewer cycles of IVIG (median 1 [range 0-7] cycle vs 7 [range 1-70] cycles, P = .01). The proportion of children with OMS relapse was similar between the protocol and historic groups (2/6 vs 5/8, P = .59). OMS symptom rating scales at 12-month follow-up were similar in the protocol group (median 2.5, range 0-3) compared to that in the historical group (median 1, range 0-7; P = .66).
Conclusions: An upfront immunomodulatory therapy protocol with rituximab permits reduction in the duration of corticosteroid and IVIG therapy without a detrimental effect on OMS outcomes. Future studies with longer follow-up will have to determine whether neurocognitive and psychosocial outcomes are improved by this approach.
Keywords: neuroblastoma; opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome; paraneoplastic; rituximab; therapeutic plasma exchange.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.