- Bartley, Christopher M;
- Ngo, Thomas T;
- Duy, Le;
- Zekeridou, Anastasia;
- Dandekar, Ravi;
- Muñiz‐Castrillo, Sergio;
- Alvarenga, Bonny D;
- Zorn, Kelsey C;
- Tubati, Asritha;
- Pinto, Anne‐Laurie;
- Browne, Weston D;
- Hullett, Patrick W;
- Terrelonge, Mark;
- Schubert, Ryan D;
- Piquet, Amanda L;
- Yang, Binxia;
- Montalvo, Mayra;
- Kung, Andrew F;
- Mann, Sabrina A;
- Shah, Maulik P;
- Geschwind, Michael D;
- Gelfand, Jeffrey M;
- DeRisi, Joseph L;
- Pittock, Sean J;
- Honnorat, Jérôme;
- Pleasure, Samuel J;
- Wilson, Michael R
Objective
Co-occurring anti-tripartite motif-containing protein 9 and 67 autoantibodies (TRIM9/67-IgG) have been reported in only a very few cases of paraneoplastic cerebellar syndrome. The value of these biomarkers and the most sensitive methods of TRIM9/67-IgG detection are not known.Methods
We performed a retrospective, multicenter study to evaluate the cerebrospinal fluid and serum of candidate TRIM9/67-IgG cases by tissue-based immunofluorescence, peptide phage display immunoprecipitation sequencing, overexpression cell-based assay (CBA), and immunoblot. Cases in which TRIM9/67-IgG was detected by at least 2 assays were considered TRIM9/67-IgG positive.Results
Among these cases (n = 13), CBA was the most sensitive (100%) and revealed that all cases had TRIM9 and TRIM67 autoantibodies. Of TRIM9/67-IgG cases with available clinical history, a subacute cerebellar syndrome was the most common presentation (n = 7/10), followed by encephalitis (n = 3/10). Of these 10 patients, 70% had comorbid cancer (7/10), 85% of whom (n = 6/7) had confirmed metastatic disease. All evaluable cancer biopsies expressed TRIM9 protein (n = 5/5), whose expression was elevated in the cancerous regions of the tissue in 4 of 5 cases.Interpretation
TRIM9/67-IgG is a rare but likely high-risk paraneoplastic biomarker for which CBA appears to be the most sensitive diagnostic assay. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:1086-1101.