BMJ Neurol Open. 2025 Mar 3;7(1):e001005. doi: 10.1136/bmjno-2024-001005. eCollection 2025.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antibody encephalitis (NMDAR-Ab-E) can have an onset during, after or prior to a pregnancy. In animal models, transplacental NMDAR immunoglobulin G transfer can affect neurodevelopment. In contrast, clinical reports of mothers affected by NMDAR-Ab-E typically are reassuring. We systematically reviewed maternal, infant and childhood clinical data pertaining to NMDAR-Ab-E with an onset before, during or after pregnancy and compared this to our single autoimmune neurology centre experience.
METHODS: After pre-registration on PROSPERO (CRD42023408447), we searched PubMed and Scopus for NMDAR-Ab-E case reports/series with an onset before, during or after pregnancy (last search 19/10/2023). We extracted maternal, neonatal and childhood outcomes using an idealised checklist to derive summary statistics.
RESULTS: After quality control, we identified 66 pregnancies in 61 women from 48 reports or series. 72% of women recovered with minimal or no neurological deficits, comparable to non-pregnancy-associated NMDAR-Ab-E. Likewise, 80% of pregnancies resulted in live births with a single neonatal death reported. Data on neonatal outcome measures were frequently unreported, and childhood follow-up was provided in only 60%. Our centre’s experience is consistent: 3/4 mothers recovered with no functional deficits and 7/8 children without evidence of compromise at a median follow-up of 2 years.
CONCLUSIONS: Current evidence does not overall suggest unfavourable maternal, fetal or childhood outcomes after NMDAR-Ab-E. However, the available sample is small, predominantly single case reports with modest follow-up, lacks standardisation, and data are often incomplete. Future approaches should address these caveats: developing multi-centre collaboration towards an international registry.
PMID:40041614 | PMC:PMC11877225 | DOI:10.1136/bmjno-2024-001005