Introduction
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a post-synaptic autoimmune disease of the neuromuscular junction with a classic bimodal presentation related to sex, most often affecting young women under 40 and men over 50 years of age1-5. Epidemiological data support an increase in its prevalence, which are explained by the presence of better diagnostic tools, greater sensitivity to diagnosis, and increased survival of patients. Thus, the prevalence from studies carried out in the 60s accounted for 0.77 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, while the most recent report a greater affectation in ranges between 13 and 25/100,0001-6.
The objective of this study is to describe the clinical presentation, diagnostic, and therapeutic approaches, as well as the prognosis of patients with MG enrolled from years 2008 to 2018 in a reference hospital of West Mexico and compare the results against a historical cohort from years 1999 to 2007 in the same hospital, the latter already published in this journal7.
Materials and methods
All consecutive adult patients diagnosed with MG treated at the outpatient clinic of the Guadalajara Civil Hospital Fray Antonio Alcalde (HCG) in a 10-year period between January 2008 and August 2018 were captured. Hospitalized patients were also included in the analysis, as well as those referred by other services such as Internal Medicine, Rehabilitation, Geriatrics, and Intensive Therapy.
To establish the diagnosis of MG, patients had to comply at least one positive test of the following: (a) Tensilon test; (b) supramaximal repetitive nerve stimulation test (Jolly test); (c) ice pack test; (d) acetylcholine receptor antibodies (ACRA); and (e) muscle-specific kinase antibodies (anti-MuSK). In addition, sociodemographic factors, comorbid, clinical presentation, abnormalities to neurological examination, findings in complementary labs, medical treatment, surgical approach, histopathological results, complications, and death were taken into account.
The disease was staged using the Osserman scale: I (only ocular compromise, ptosis, and diplopia); IIa (moderate diffuse skeletal muscle involvement, generalized weakness, ptosis, and diplopia without respiratory deficit); IIb (severe muscular involvement associated with ocular and bulbar involvement, marked weakness, dysphagia, dysarthria, and impaired mastication); III (rapidly progressive muscular involvement associated with ocular and bulbar muscle involvement, and with respiratory deficit); IV (chronic myasthenia with severe diffuse, ocular and bulbar muscle involvement, and resulting from types I, II, and III gradual progression)8.
Due to the bimodal presentation of the MG, the population was divided into four groups for analysis: ≤ 30 versus > 30 years of age and ≤ 50 versus > 50 years of age. The ethics committee in our hospital approved the study; as this is an observational study, not informed consent of the participants was required.
The resulting data were captured and analyzed using the SPSS v25.0 system. Pearsons Chi-squared test was used for nominal variables in the univariate analysis. The MannWhitney U-test was used to compare abnormally distributed continuous variables (determined by the ShapiroWilk test). The results with p < 0.05 were considered significant.
In a retrospective and introspective analysis, the results were compared to a cohort of patients with MG published in this journal by Echeverría et al. in 2008, with data collected from the year 1999 to 2007, conducted in the same hospital (Guadalajara Civil Hospital Fray Antonio Alcalde) and by the same chief investigator; the same inclusion criteria were applied to our cohort, except for that they did not include ice pack test and anti-MuSK in the diagnostic approach. For further information on this work, kindly consider look at the original article7. No patients of that previous article were included in this cohort. The observations of this comparison are the basis of the discussion.
Results
During the established period from 2008 to 2018, 50 patients with diagnosis of MG were initially considered, 11 were excluded because they had insufficient data for analysis or correspond to another diagnosis, resulting in a final 39 enrolled patients, 23 women (59%) and 16 men (41%), with a sex ratio of 1.4:1. The age range was between 17 and 80 years, with an average of 49.8 years, 48.5 for women, and 51.7 for men (p = 0.78). A total of 21 (54%) patients were > 50 years old and 8 (20.5%) were ≤ 30 (Table 1).
Variables | Total (n = 39) | Sex | Age (years) | Age (years) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male (n = 16) | Female (n = 23) | p value | ≤ 30 (n = 8) | > 30 (n = 31) | p value | ≤ 50 (n = 18) | > 50 (n = 21) | p value | ||
Female, n (%) | 23 (59) | N/A | 23 (100) | N/A | 4 (50) | 19 (61) | − | 12 (67) | 11 (52) | − |
Male, n (%) | 16 (41) | 16 (100) | N/A | N/A | 4 (50) | 12 (39) | 6 (33) | 10 (48) | ||
Autoimmune disease, n (%) | 5 (13) | 1 (6) | 4 (17) | − | 0 (0) | 5 (16) | − | 4 (22) | 1 (5) | − |
Ptosis, n (%) | 36 (92) | 13 (81) | 23 (100) | 0.03 | 7 (87) | 28 (90) | − | 16 (89) | 20 (95) | − |
Bilateral ptosis, n (%) | 16/36 (44) | 9/13 (69) | 7/23 (30) | 0.02 | 4/7 (57) | 12/29 (41) | − | 8/16 (50) | 8/20 (40) | − |
Unilateral ptosis, n (%) | 20/36 (56) | 4/13 (31) | 16/23 (70) | 0.02 | 3/7 (43) | 17/19 (59) | − | 8/16 (50) | 12/20 (60) | − |
Extraocular muscle paralysis, n (%) | 23 (59) | 10 (62) | 13 (57) | − | 1 (12.5) | 22 (71) | 0.003 | 6 (33) | 17 (81) | 0.003 |
Osserman at arrival | ||||||||||
I, n (%) | 11 (28) | 2 (12) | 9 (39) | − | 0 (0) | 11 (35) | 0.04 | 3 (17) | 8 (38) | − |
IIa, n (%) | 14 (36) | 8 (50) | 6 (26) | − | 5 (62) | 9 (29) | − | 8 (44) | 6 (29) | − |
Iib, n (%) | 13 (33) | 5 (31) | 8 (35) | − | 3 (38) | 10 (32) | − | 7 (39) | 6 (29) | − |
III, n (%) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | N/A | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | − | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | − |
IV, n (%) | 1 (2.6) | 1 (6) | 0 (0) | − | 0 (0) | 1 (3) | − | 0 (0) | 1 (5) | − |
Jolly (+), n (%) | 20/24 (83) | 7/9 (78) | 13/15 (87) | − | 4/6 (66) | 16/18 (89) | − | 10/12 (83) | 10/12 (83) | − |
ACRA (+), n (%) | 30/34 (88) | 15/15 (100) | 15/19 (79) | − | 6/7 (86) | 24/27 (89) | − | 13/14 (93) | 17/20 (85) | − |
CT scan (+), n (%) | 15/30 (50) | 9 /14 (64) | 6 /16 (37) | − | 5/8 (62) | 10/22 (45) | − | 9/16 (56) | 6/14 (43) | − |
Medical treatment | ||||||||||
Pyridostigmine, n (%) | 37 (95) | 15 (94) | 22 (96) | − | 8 (100) | 29 (94) | − | 18 (100) | 19 (90) | − |
Corticoids, n (%) | 27 (69) | 11 (69) | 16 (70) | − | 5 (62) | 22 (71) | − | 12 (67) | 15 (71) | − |
Azathioprine, n (%) | 33 (85) | 14 (87) | 19 (83) | − | 7 (87) | 26 (84) | − | 15 (83) | 18 (86) | − |
Thymectomy/histopathology | ||||||||||
Thymectomy, n (%) | 16 (41) | 9 (56) | 7/23 (30) | − | 6/8 (75) | 10/31 (32) | 0.02 | 10/18 (56) | 6/21 (29) | − |
Benign, n (%) | 14/16 (87) | 7/9 (78) | 7/7 (100) | − | 6/6 (100) | 8/10 (80) | − | 9/10 (90) | 5/6 (83) | − |
Hyperplasia, n (%) | 12/16 (75) | 5/9 (55.5) | 7/7 (100) | 0.04 | 6/6 (100) | 6/10 (60) | − | 9/10 (90) | 3/6 (50) | − |
Benign thymoma, n (%) | 2/16 (12.5) | 2/9 (22) | 0/7 (0) | − | 0/6 (0) | 2/10 (20) | − | 0/10 (0) | 2/6 (33.3) | − |
Malignant thymoma, n (%) | 2/16 (12.5) | 2/9 (22) | 0/7 (0) | − | 0/6 (0) | 2/10 (20) | − | 1/10 (10) | 1/6 (17) | − |
Exacerbation, n (%) | 5 (13) | 3 (19) | 2 (9) | − | 1/8 (12) | 4(31 (13) | − | 2 (11) | 3 (14) | − |
Myasthenic crisis, n (%) | 5 (13) | 4 (25) | 1 (4) | − | 1/8 (12) | (13) 4(31 (13) | − | 1 (6) | 4 (19) | − |
ACRA: acetylcholine receptor antibodies; CT: computed tomography; N/A: not apply; −: not significant.
Regarding medical history, 15 patients (38.5%) had systemic arterial hypertension and 7 (18%) diabetes. Five patients (13%) (four women and one man) had associated autoimmune disease: hypothyroidism, vitiligo, vitiligo plus hypothyroidism, pernicious anemia, and dermatomyositis. The staging of the disease was predominantly distributed in Grades I, IIa, and IIb of Osserman, without significant differences with respect to sex; in the group of ≤ 30 years, there was no Grade I cases (p = 0.04) (Table 1).
Important aspects in signs and symptoms were the presence of ptosis in 92% of cases, most frequently in women (100% vs. 81%) (p = 0.03); bilateral ptosis had a predominance in men (69% vs. 30%) (p = 0.02). Extraocular muscle paralysis at exploration was much more frequent in the group > 30 years (p = 0.003) and in the group > 50 years (p = 0.003) (Table 1).
Regarding MG diagnosis, the Tensilon test was positive in the only patient who was performed, while the supramaximal repetitive nerve stimulation test (Jolly test) was positive in 20 of the 24 patients evaluated (83%). One case was diagnosed by the ice pack test. The ACRA analysis was performed on 34 patients, and the result was positive in 30 of them (88%), while anti-MuSK were requested in two patients, both negative. Chest-computed tomography (CT) was performed in 30 patients, finding thymic alteration in 15 cases (50%) (Table 1).
In total, 37 patients were treated with pyridostigmine (95%) in a dose range of 90-540 mg and an average of 184 mg. Corticosteroids were prescribed in varying doses to 27 patients (69%), azathioprine (AZA) was indicated to 33 patients (85%) in doses of 50-150 mg, with an average of 80 mg and mycophenolate mofetil was only indicated to two patients (5%). Two patients were treated with plasmapheresis and one with intravenous immunoglobulin for exacerbation of symptoms or diagnosis of myasthenic crisis (Table 1).
Surgical treatment (transsternal thymectomy) was performed in 16 (41%) patients, being a little more frequent among men (56% vs. 30%). This procedure was significantly more frequent in the group ≤ 30 years compared to > 30 years (75% vs. 32%, p = 0.02). Fourteen patients (87.5%) presented benign histopathological findings: twelve (75%) corresponded to thymic hyperplasia (7 women vs. 5 men, p = 0.04) and 2 (12.5%) to being thymoma; in the remaining two patients (12.5%), malignant thymoma was reported (Table 1).
Information related to the follow-up of the cases was obtained in 31/39 patients, with an average of 32 months of follow-up (minimum of two and a maximum of 108 months). No deaths were reported at any time, even during exacerbations or myasthenic crises. Table 2 shows the comparison of patients characteristics in the two cohorts, their diagnostic approach, medical and surgical treatment, histopathological findings, and mortality. The differences or similarities between are discussed below.
Variable | 1999-2007 cohort7 | 2008-2018 cohort |
---|---|---|
Number of cases | 43 | 39 |
Female, n (%) | 25 (58) | 23 (59) |
Average age, years | 43 | 50 |
Systemic arterial hypertension, n (%) | 2 (4) | 15 (38.5) |
Type II diabetes, n (%) | 0 (0) | 7 (18) |
Autoimmune disease, n (%) | 4 (9) | 5 (13) |
Osserman at arrival | ||
I, n (%) | 9 (21) | 11 (28) |
IIa, n (%) | 14 (33) | 14 (36) |
IIb, n (%) | 19 (44) | 13 (33) |
III, n (%) | 1 (2) | 0 (0) |
IV, n (%) | 0 (0) | 1 (2.6) |
Tensilon (+), n (%) | 13/13 (100) | 1 (2.6) |
Jolly (+), n (%) | 31/32 (97) | 20/24 (83) |
ACRA (+), n (%) | 14/38 (37) | 30/34 (88) |
CT scan (+), n (%) | 20/35 (57) | 15/30 (50) |
Pyridostigmine, n (%) | 43 (100) | 37 (95) |
Corticoids, n (%) | 27 (63) | 27 (69) |
Azathioprine, n (%) | 2 (4) | 33 (85) |
Mycophenolate, n (%) | 0 (0) | 2 (5.1) |
Thymectomy, n (%) | 23 (53) | 16 (41) |
Histopathologic result | ||
Normal, n (%) Hyperplasia, n (%) Benign thymoma, n (%) Malignant thymoma, n (%) Mortality, n (%) |
8/23 (35) 11/23 (48) 4/23 (17) 0/23 (0) 7 (16) |
0/16 (0) 12/16 (75) 2/16 (12.5) 2/16 (12.5) 0 (0) |
ACRA: acetylcholine receptor antibodies; CT: computed tomography.
Discussion
MG had a mild predominance in women with a frequency almost equal to the previous cohort of 58%; however, in both cohorts this figure is less than 60-88% of what was reported by other authors5,7,9-11. Regarding age, different publications in the past two decades in Mexico stand out for a growing average age of patients; the average age reported in 2002 was 32 years; in our previous cohort from 1999 to 2007 it was 43 years; another study of our group reported 47 years in 2010 and the current one, 50 years5. This aging of the population diagnosed with MG has also been observed in the United States, Europe, Japan, and China2,5,7,12. The typical bimodal distribution associated with sex was not observed by our group; however, this may be associated with insufficient samples, since in a Mexican study of 2010 in which more than 500 cases were analyzed, the bimodal presentation was evident5.
Chronic-degenerative comorbidities (arterial hypertension and diabetes) significantly increased their frequency; moreover, diabetes is a new comorbid that was not observed in the previous cohort7. This is likely to reflect the usefulness of timely detection programs and/or be the result of the epidemiological and pandemic transition of chronic-degenerative diseases in our country, a proposal supported by the Mexico National Survey of Health and Nutrition Mid-way 2016 (ENSANUT MC 2016)13.
The associated diagnosis of autoimmune diseases had a slight increase of only 4% compared to the previous cohort (9%); however, it continues to be < 15-22% reported by other series, including some from Mexico1,7,14,15. No cases of thyroiditis, systemic lupus erythematosus, or rheumatoid arthritis were identified, despite being three of the main autoimmune pathologies associated with MG1. This is a window of opportunity to emphasize a better autoimmune approach.
Although the majority of patients presented a generalized state of MG (stage II), the percentage was slightly lower than the previous cohort (77%)7. Stage II was predominant in subjects under 30 years of age; nevertheless, this finding has not been well established in other studies that have rather shown a tendency toward both Stages I and II16,17.
In relation to specific signs and symptoms, there is no point of comparison, since these were not included in the 2008 cohort. The higher prevalence of extraocular muscle paralysis in older patients may be due to delayed treatment and disease progression during years without a diagnosis.
The Tensilon test showed a clear decrease in its performance, since it has been displaced by other more practical and less risky diagnostic methods. The repetitive nerve stimulation test continued to be a useful and frequently requested diagnostic method, especially in ACRA seronegative patients. Single fiber electromyography is the most sensitive tool for the diagnosis of MG, it is positive in 95% of patients with generalized MG and in 90-95% with ocular MG; however, it is not yet available in West Mexico, a significant delay compared to other countries where is available in the majority of reference centers2,18,19. In a particular patient with high clinical suspicion, the diagnosis was made using the ice pack test (with high positive predictive value), after being negative for both ACRA and supra-maximal repetitive nerve stimulation test20.
A very prominent point in our center is the increase in the percentage of positive ACRA patients (30 of 34 patients tested [88%]) compared to the previous cohort (14 of 38 patients tested [37%]). It is likely that at that time the detection of the antibodies by the local laboratory was deficient with respect to the methods and processing of the samples and therefore the results were unintentionally affected7. Although the percentage obtained here is very consistent with the reported worldwide, with 12% of cases being seronegative, anti-MuSK are not usually requested even though they represent 1-10% of cases; Ryanodine antibodies present in 70% of patients with thymoma and MG are not available, neither do antibodies against lipoprotein receptor-related protein 4 found in 1-3% of cases3,21. The percentage of thymic alteration in the CT scan was similar to the 57% of the previous cohort7.
Almost all of our patients were treated with pyridostigmine. Corticosteroids continued to be used in two-thirds of the cases. An important advance was the increase in the use of steroid-sparing agents, administered to 90% of patients7. The medical management of MG in our hospital is consistent with the worldwide consensus of experts and data from controlled trials that support the use of prednisone in combination with AZA as a first-line treatment1,22. Good results have been obtained with the use of rituximab and should be considered, especially for refractory cases23,24.
Compared to the previous cohort (53%), thymectomy was performed in a smaller number of patients, predominantly in men, younger subjects, and generalized stages7. Our patients were selected for surgery based on the CT findings, however, in patients with autoimmune MG without thymoma, thymectomy is performed as an option to avoid or minimize the dose and duration of immunosuppressants, if patients do not respond to an initial immunosuppressive trial or have intolerable side effects12,22,25. A recent study showed special benefit in patients with generalized disease, disease duration of < 3-5 years, age of < 60-65 years, and symptoms not completely relieved with anticholinesterase drugs1,10.
In addition, a report from the National Medical Center 20 de Noviembre in Mexico found that there is a statistically significant improvement (p = 0.000) on the quantitative myasthenia gravis score scale when comparing the clinical condition of patients 1 year before versus 4 years after thymectomy26.
In this analysis, the frequency of thymic hyperplasia is consistent with that reported in other articles. Our thymoma percentage (25%) is high, and we do not identify cases of thymic atrophy1,2,9,10,12. In contrast to the previous study (48%), thymic hyperplasia represents a higher percentage, with a decrease in normal results, probably due to an improvement in sample processing; also, no cases of malignant thymoma were identified in the previous cohort7.
Regarding prognosis, there is a clear decrease in mortality compared to the previous cohort, where it was recorded in 16%7. While it is true that there was a loss of follow-up in eight cases, there is certainty in the neurological staff and group that publish this report that no death was recorded in our hospital. A comparative analysis related to the prognosis with other hospitals in our country is not feasible due to the particular objectives of the studies or the small number of samples27,28. As a weakness, the response to treatment was not followed with validated functional scales; however, these will be included in prospective.
Conclusion
There are differences between the cohorts of our hospital, highlighting in the last one an older age of presentation, the appearance of chronic-degenerative diseases, greater positivity to ACRA, optimization of pharmacological management, less thymectomy, and no mortality. Much progress has been made in the diagnosis and treatment of MG in our hospital in the past decade; however, there still are areas of opportunity such as single-fiber electrodiagnosis, the realization of other non-ACRA antibodies and optimization of a flowchart for surgical treatment. We encourage the replicas of this work in others hospital centers.