Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

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  • General term for human prion disease, including sporadic, genetic, and infectiously-acquired forms

Differential Diagnosis

  • Alzheimer dementia
  • Vascular dementia
  • Frontotemporal dementia
  • Dementia with Lewy bodies
  • Parkinson disease
  • Cerebral lymphoma
  • Paraneoplastic syndrome
  • Psychiatric disorders
  • Huntington disease
  • Hashimoto encephalitis

Pathophysiology

  • A prion protein gene PRNP encodes a protein, PrP^C^, that is expressed in the brain and reticuloendethelial system
  • Mutations of PRNP can create versions of PrP that folds abnormally, called PrP^Sc^
  • Misfolded PrP^Sc^ catalyzes other PrP^C^ molecules to misfold, thereby converting them into more PrP^Sc^

Syndromes

Sporadic CJD (sCJD)

  • Age 45-75
  • Myoclonus, cerebellar signs and symptoms, and visual disturbance (includes cortical blindness)
  • May have prodromal symptoms including fatigue, insomnia, depression, weight loss, headaches, general malaise and ill-defined pain sensation
  • Pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs may also develop, with upper motor neuron signs on exam
  • Akinetic mutism commonly develops 2–3 months after the onset of symptoms
  • Rapid or subacute decline, with a median survival 7-9 months from symptom onset
  • Can detect 14-3-3 protein in CSF
  • Can have a variety of subtypes, including visual, cerebellar, thalamic, or striatal-predominant symptoms

Genetic CJD (gCJD)

  • Autosomal dominant mutations in PRNP with high penetrance, of which E200K is the most common worldwide
  • Median age of onset is 58 years
  • There are some specific forms

Gerstmann-Straüssler-Scheinker Syndrome (GSS)

  • Prominent early ataxia and corticospinal tract degeneration
  • Dementia is a late feature
  • Lasts for 3 months to 13 years

Fatal Familial Insomnia (FFI)

  • First described in Italian families
  • Starts with insomnia, autonomic hyperactivity (increased sweating, teraing, salivation, mild nocturnal hyperthermia, tachycardia, and hypertension)
  • Later, motor disturbances including ataxia, myoclonus, spasticity, hyperreflexia, and dysarthria
  • Dementia would be a late finding
  • Median age of onset is 50 to 56 years, but can occur from 19 to 83 years

Variant CJD (vCJD)

  • Younger age (mean 26 years and range 12 to 74 years)
  • May be from bovine spongiform encephalopathy in people homozygous 129M polymorphism of PrP
    • Large outbreak in UK starting in 1995 related to an outbreak of BSE in 1985
  • Can be transmitted via blood transfusion
  • Prominent neuropsychiatric features: depression, anxiety, emotional lability, irritability, aggressive behavior, social withdrawal, delusions and hallucination
  • Later, cerebellar syndrome with limb and gait ataxia, chorea, myoclonus, and dementia
  • Median survival 14 months
  • Can be diagnosed with PrP^Sc^ on tonsil biopsy

Iatrogenic CJD (iCJD)

  • Transmitted by corneal and dura mater grafts, liver transplantation, growth hormone, neurosurgical procedures, and stereotactic EEG
  • Incubation period ranges from 16 months to 25 years
  • Presentation usually sCJD, but have also been cases of GSS and, rarely, vCJD

Diagnosis

CSF

Marker Sn Sp LR+ LR–
14-3-3 88% (82-93) 72% (69-75) 3.1 (2.8-3.6) 0.16 (0.1-0.26)
Tau >976* 91% (84-95) 88% (85-90) 7.4 (6.9-7.8) 0.1 (0.06-0.2)
Tau >1300** 84% (76-90) 92% (90-94) 10.9 (8.5-13.9) 0.17 (0.11-0.26)
S100B >2.5* 87% (80-92) 87% (84-91) 6.6 (6.1-7.1) 0.15 (0.09-0.2)
S100B >4.2** 52% (42-61) 97% (95-98) 15.3 (10.2-23.1) 0.5 (0.42-0.6)
Tau + S100B* 18 (12.9-25) 0.02 (0.01-0.09)
Tau + S100B + 14-3-3** 18.6 (13.1-26.3) 0.03 (0.01-0.1)
  • CSF itself usually bland, non-inflammatory

Imaging

  • MRI is the most useful neuroimaging modality, especially with DWI
    • Increased T2 FLAIR signals in striatum
    • One sign is the "pulvinar sign"
  • CT only useful for exclusion of other causes

Other

  • EEG can have characteristic abnormalities and should be routinely done
    • Bilaterally synchronic periodic sharp wave complexes, but can be transient, and can also be absent at the start and towards the end
  • Histopathology of brain tissue biopsy or autopsy is still the gold standard
    • Neuronal loss, vacuolation of the neuropil, spongiform changes

Management

  • Supportive care
  • Pentosan polysulfate may prolong life by weeks

Disinfection Practices

  • Risk of transmission
    • High (>50%): brain, dura mater, spinal cord, and eye
    • Low (10-20%, though no reported human cases): CSF, lymph nodes, kidneys, lung, and spleen
    • None (0%): all other tissues
  • Standard precautions when caring for patients; no need for additional PPE
  • Equipment in disinfection and sterilization
    • Types of equipment
      • Critical (surgical equipment)
      • Semicritical (endoscopes etc. that contact mucous membranes)
      • Noncritical (cuffs, floors, walls, etc)
    • High-risk tissue exposure on a critical instrument in a high-risk patient (known or suspected CJD)
      • Autoclav for 121-132ºC for 60 minutes (gravity) or 134ºC for ≥18 min (prevacuum)
      • May be combined with sodium hydroxide, if the instrument can handle it
      • Instruments should be kept moist until they are cleaned
      • Items that cannot undergo this procedure should be discarded
    • Other tissue exposures, or semicritical instrument, or not high-risk patient
      • Follow usual decontamination procedures
  • No extra precautions needed for burial

Case Definitions

Sporadic CJD

Possible

  • Progressive dementia, and
  • EEG atypical or not known, and
  • Duration <2 years, and
  • At least two of the following four clinical features:
    • Myoclonus
    • Visual or cerebellar disturbance
    • Pyramidal/extrapyramidal dysfunction
    • Akinetic mutism

Probable

  • Progressive dementia, and
  • At least two of the following four clinical features:
    • Myoclonus
    • A typical EEG, whatever the clinical duration of the disease, and/or
    • A positive 14-3-3 assay for CSF, and
    • A clinical duration to death < years

Definite

  • Neuropathologic confirmation, and/or
  • Confirmation of protease-resistant prion protein (immunocytochemistry or Western blot) and/or
  • The presence of scrapie-associated fibrils

Variant CJD

  • I: Presentation
    • A. Progressive neuropsychiatric disorder
    • B. Duration of illness >6 months
    • C. Routine investigations do not suggest an alternative diagnosis
    • D. No history of potential iatrogenic exposure
    • E. No evidence of a familial form of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy
  • II: Symptoms
    • A. Early psychitric symptoms
    • B. Persistent painful sensory symptoms
    • C. Ataxia
    • D. Myoclonus or chorea or dystonia
    • E. Dementia
  • III: Investigations
    • A. EEG does not chow the typical appearance of sCJD, or no EEG performed
    • B. MRI brain scan shows bilateral symmetrical pulvinar high signal
  • IV: Pathology
    • A. Positive tonsil biopsy

Definite: I.A and neuropathologic confirmation of vCJD

Probable: I and 4/5 of II and III.A and III.B, or I and IV.A

Possible: I and 4/5 of II and III.A