4.7 Review

Hypothalamitis: A Novel Autoimmune Endocrine Disease. A Literature Review and Case Report

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 106, Issue 2, Pages E415-E429

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgaa771

Keywords

diabetes insipidus; hypophysitis; hypopituitarism; hypothalamitis; pituitary

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The case study describes a 35-year-old female with autoimmune hypothalitis, presenting with central diabetes insipidus, partial empty sella, hypopituitarism, and hyperprolactinemia. Immunohistochemical examination of the surgically removed suprasellar mass confirmed autoimmune involvement, with the presence of antihypothalamus antibodies and high AVPcAb titers, suggesting isolated hypothalamitis. This observation suggests hypothalamitis as a new isolated autoimmune disease involving the hypothalamus, with potential consequences such as lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis.
Context The relationship between the endocrine system and autoimmunity has been recognized for a long time and one of the best examples of autoimmune endocrine disease is autoimmune hypophysitis. A better understanding of autoimmune mechanisms and radiological, biochemical, and immunological developments has given rise to the definition of new autoimmune disorders including autoimmunity-related hypothalamic-pituitary disorders. However, whether hypothalamitis may occur as a distinct entity is still a matter of debate. Evidence Acquisition Here we describe a 35-year-old woman with growing suprasellar mass, partial empty sella, central diabetes insipidus, hypopituitarism, and hyperprolactinemia. Evidence Synthesis Histopathologic examination of surgically removed suprasellar mass revealed lymphocytic infiltrate suggestive of an autoimmune disease with hypothalamic involvement. The presence of antihypothalamus antibodies to arginine vasopressin (AVP)-secreting cells (AVPcAb) at high titers and the absence of antipituitary antibodies suggested the diagnosis of isolated hypothalamitis. Some similar conditions have sometimes been reported in the literature but the simultaneous double finding of lymphocytic infiltrate and the presence of AVPcAb so far has never been reported. Conclusions We think that the hypothalamitis can be considered a new isolated autoimmune disease affecting the hypothalamus while the lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis can be a consequence of hypothalamitis with subsequent autoimmune involvement of the pituitary. To our knowledge this is the first observation of autoimmune hypothalamic involvement with central diabetes insipidus, partial empty sella, antihypothalamic antibodies and hypopituitarism.

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