Author:
Muccioli Lorenzo,Pensato Umberto,Bernabè Giorgia,Ferri Lorenzo,Tappatà Maria,Volpi Lilia,Cani Ilaria,Henry Olivia J.,Ceccaroni Francesca,Cevoli Sabina,Stofella Gloria,Pasini Elena,Fornaro Giacomo,Tonon Caterina,Vidale Simone,Liguori Rocco,Tinuper Paolo,Michelucci Roberto,Cortelli Pietro,Bisulli Francesca
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
To report on efficacy and safety of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy in a case series of patients with COVID-19-related encephalopathy.
Methods
We retrospectively collected data on all patients with COVID-19 hospitalized at two Italian hospitals who developed encephalopathy during disease course and were treated with IVIg.
Results
Five patients (two females, mean age 66.8 years) developed encephalopathy after a mean of 12.6 days, since the onset of respiratory/constitutional symptoms related to COVID-19. Four patients suffered severe respiratory distress, three of which required invasive mechanical ventilation. Neurological manifestations included impaired consciousness, agitation, delirium, pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs. EEG demonstrated diffuse slowing in all patients. Brain MRI showed non-specific findings. CSF analysis revealed normal cell count and protein levels. In all subjects, RT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2 in CSF tested negative. IVIg at 0.4 g/kg/die was commenced 29.8 days (mean, range: 19–55 days) after encephalopathy onset, leading to complete electroclinical recovery in all patients, with an initial improvement of neuropsychiatric symptoms observed in 3.4 days (mean, range: 1–10 days). No adverse events related to IVIg were observed.
Conclusions
Our preliminary findings suggest that IVIg may represent a safe and effective treatment for COVID-19-associated encephalopathy. Clinical efficacy may be driven by the anti-inflammatory action of IVIg, associated with its anti-cytokine qualities.
Funder
Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
34 articles.
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