16 research outputs found
Advances in the diagnosis, pathogenesis and treatment of CIDP
Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) is the most
common chronic autoimmune neuropathy. Despite clinical challenges in
diagnosis-owing in part to the existence of disease variants, and
different views on how many electrophysiological abnormalities are
needed to document demyelination-consensus criteria seem to have been
reached for research or clinical practice. Current standard of care
involves corticosteroids, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) and/or
plasmapheresis, which provide short-term benefits. Maintenance therapy
with IVIg can induce sustained remission, increase quality of life and
prevent further axonal loss, but caution is needed to avoid
overtreatment. Commonly used immunosuppressive drugs offer minimal
benefit, necessitating the development of new therapies for
treatment-refractory patients. Advances in our understanding of the
underlying immunopathology in CIDP have identified new targets for
future therapeutic efforts, including T cells, B cells, and
transmigration and transduction molecules. New biomarkers and scoring
systems represent emerging tools with the potential to predict
therapeutic responses and identify patients with active disease for
enrollment into clinical trials. This Review highlights the recent
advances in diagnosing CIDP, provides an update on the immunopathology
including new target antigens, and discusses current treatments, ongoing
challenges and future therapeutic directions