Humoral correlates of clinical response to thymectomy in myasthenia gravis
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
12-16-2025
Journal
Journal of autoimmunity
Volume
158
DOI
10.1016/j.jaut.2025.103517
Keywords
AChR-antibody; Glycosylation profile; Myasthenia gravis; Thymectomy
Abstract
Mechanisms by which thymectomy confers its clinical benefit in patients with AChR-antibody (Ab) positive myasthenia gravis (MG) remain poorly understood. We used a systems-level approach combined with high-dimensional characterization of Ab-associated immune features to identify Ab-features that track with clinical response to thymectomy in 78 patients with AChR-Ab positive MG, recruited during the MGTX trial, an NIH-sponsored randomized, controlled study of thymectomy plus prednisone versus prednisone alone. Clinically meaningful improvement was defined as a change of at least 3 points on the quantitative MG scale at month 36 compared to baseline. AChR-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) titers decreased in patients experiencing clinical improvement but remained stable in patients with poor response to therapy. Thymectomized patients showed an accelerated decline in AChR-specific IgG titers. At month 36, the frequency of digalactosylated and monosialylated total IgG Fc-glycans was increased in thymectomized responders compared to non-responders. Fc-glycosylation profiles were unchanged in prednisone only treated patients with or without clinically meaningful improvement. Clinical benefit achieved by thymectomy is strongly associated with an anti-inflammatory IgG Fc-glycosylation profile.
APA Citation
Sousa, Carla D.; Terroba-Navajas, Paula; Tzartos, John; Orešković, Ivana D.; Pučić-Baković, Maja; Lauc, Gordan; Bartsch, Yannic C.; Kaminski, Henry J.; and Lünemann, Jan D., "Humoral correlates of clinical response to thymectomy in myasthenia gravis" (2025). GW Authored Works. Paper 8395.
https://hsrc.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/gwhpubs/8395
Department
Neurology