TY - JOUR A1 - Ullmann, Andrew J. A1 - Schmidt-Hieber, Martin A1 - Bertz, Hartmut A1 - Heinz, Werner J. A1 - Kiehl, Michael A1 - Krüger, William A1 - Mousset, Sabine A1 - Neuburger, Stefan A1 - Neumann, Silke A1 - Penack, Olaf A1 - Silling, Gerda A1 - Vehreschild, Jörg Janne A1 - Einsele, Hermann A1 - Maschmeyer, Georg T1 - Infectious diseases in allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation: prevention and prophylaxis strategy guidelines 2016 JF - Annals of Hematology N2 - Infectious complications after allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HCT) remain a clinical challenge. This is a guideline provided by the AGIHO (Infectious Diseases Working Group) of the DGHO (German Society for Hematology and Medical Oncology). A core group of experts prepared a preliminary guideline, which was discussed, reviewed, and approved by the entire working group. The guideline provides clinical recommendations for the preventive management including prophylactic treatment of viral, bacterial, parasitic, and fungal diseases. The guideline focuses on antimicrobial agents but includes recommendations on the use of vaccinations. This is the updated version of the AGHIO guideline in the field of allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation utilizing methods according to evidence-based medicine criteria. KW - Bone-marrow-transplantation KW - Pneumocystis-carinii-pneumonia KW - Influenzae type B KW - Respiratory syncytial virus KW - Infections KW - invasive fungal infections KW - Varicella-Zoster-Virus KW - Hepatitis B virus KW - Herpes simplex virus KW - Human immunodefiency virus KW - Low-dose acyclovir KW - Viral KW - Fungal KW - Bacteria Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-187587 VL - 95 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jarius, Sven A1 - Ruprecht, Klemens A1 - Kleiter, Ingo A1 - Borisow, Nadja A1 - Asgari, Nasrin A1 - Pitarokoili, Kalliopi A1 - Pache, Florence A1 - Stich, Oliver A1 - Beume, Lena-Alexandra A1 - Hümmert, Martin W. A1 - Ringelstein, Marius A1 - Trebst, Corinna A1 - Winkelmann, Alexander A1 - Schwarz, Alexander A1 - Buttmann, Mathias A1 - Zimmermann, Hanna A1 - Kuchling, Joseph A1 - Franciotta, Diego A1 - Capobianco, Marco A1 - Siebert, Eberhard A1 - Lukas, Carsten A1 - Korporal-Kuhnke, Mirjam A1 - Haas, Jürgen A1 - Fechner, Kai A1 - Brandt, Alexander U. A1 - Schanda, Kathrin A1 - Aktas, Orhan A1 - Paul, Friedemann A1 - Reindl, Markus A1 - Wildemann, Brigitte T1 - MOG-IgG in NMO and related disorders: a multicenter study of 50 patients. Part 2: Epidemiology, clinical presentation, radiological and laboratory features, treatment responses, and long-term outcome JF - Journal of Neuroinflammation N2 - Background A subset of patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) has been shown to be seropositive for myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies (MOG-IgG). Objective To describe the epidemiological, clinical, radiological, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and electrophysiological features of a large cohort of MOG-IgG-positive patients with optic neuritis (ON) and/or myelitis (n = 50) as well as attack and long-term treatment outcomes. Methods Retrospective multicenter study. Results The sex ratio was 1:2.8 (m:f). Median age at onset was 31 years (range 6-70). The disease followed a multiphasic course in 80% (median time-to-first-relapse 5 months; annualized relapse rate 0.92) and resulted in significant disability in 40% (mean follow-up 75 ± 46.5 months), with severe visual impairment or functional blindness (36%) and markedly impaired ambulation due to paresis or ataxia (25%) as the most common long-term sequelae. Functional blindness in one or both eyes was noted during at least one ON attack in around 70%. Perioptic enhancement was present in several patients. Besides acute tetra-/paraparesis, dysesthesia and pain were common in acute myelitis (70%). Longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesions were frequent, but short lesions occurred at least once in 44%. Fourty-one percent had a history of simultaneous ON and myelitis. Clinical or radiological involvement of the brain, brainstem, or cerebellum was present in 50%; extra-opticospinal symptoms included intractable nausea and vomiting and respiratory insufficiency (fatal in one). CSF pleocytosis (partly neutrophilic) was present in 70%, oligoclonal bands in only 13%, and blood-CSF-barrier dysfunction in 32%. Intravenous methylprednisolone (IVMP) and long-term immunosuppression were often effective; however, treatment failure leading to rapid accumulation of disability was noted in many patients as well as flare-ups after steroid withdrawal. Full recovery was achieved by plasma exchange in some cases, including after IVMP failure. Breakthrough attacks under azathioprine were linked to the drug-specific latency period and a lack of cotreatment with oral steroids. Methotrexate was effective in 5/6 patients. Interferon-beta was associated with ongoing or increasing disease activity. Rituximab and ofatumumab were effective in some patients. However, treatment with rituximab was followed by early relapses in several cases; end-of-dose relapses occurred 9-12 months after the first infusion. Coexisting autoimmunity was rare (9%). Wingerchuk’s 2006 and 2015 criteria for NMO(SD) and Barkhof and McDonald criteria for multiple sclerosis (MS) were met by 28%, 32%, 15%, 33%, respectively; MS had been suspected in 36%. Disease onset or relapses were preceded by infection, vaccination, or pregnancy/delivery in several cases. Conclusion Our findings from a predominantly Caucasian cohort strongly argue against the concept of MOG-IgG denoting a mild and usually monophasic variant of NMOSD. The predominantly relapsing and often severe disease course and the short median time to second attack support the use of prophylactic long-term treatments in patients with MOG-IgG-positive ON and/or myelitis. KW - Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies (MOG-IgG) KW - Aquaporin-4 antibodies (AQP4-IgG, NMO-IgG) KW - Optic neuritis KW - Transverse myelitis KW - Longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis KW - Magnetic resonance imaging KW - Autoantibodies KW - Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) KW - Cerebrospinal fluid KW - Oligoclonal bands KW - Electrophysiology KW - Evoked potentials KW - Treatment KW - Therapy KW - Methotrexate KW - Azathioprine KW - Rituximab KW - Ofatumumab KW - Interferon beta KW - Glatiramer acetate KW - Natalizumab KW - Outcome KW - Pregnancy KW - Infections KW - Vaccination KW - Multiple sclerosis KW - Barkhof criteria KW - McDonald criteria KW - Wingerchuk criteria 2006 and 2015 KW - IPND criteria KW - International consensus diagnostic criteria for neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165570 VL - 13 IS - 280 ER -