Delayed onset of severe chronic pain in CASPR2 autoantibody-associated Morvan syndrome in a former UK swine abattoir worker

Pain Rep. 2018 Sep 17;3(5):e675. doi: 10.1097/PR9.0000000000000675. eCollection 2018 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

Introduction: Autoantibody-mediated autoimmunity directed against targets within the voltage-gated potassium channel complex (VGKCC autoantibodies) has been implicated in causing neuropathic pain.

Methods: We report the case of a 76-year-old, United Kingdom male who was diagnosed with contactin-associated protein 2 (CASPR2) autoantibody-associated Morvan syndrome, a rare neurological condition.

Results: He had previously worked in a swine abattoir; exposure to aerosol within swine abattoirs has been reported to elicit an immune response resulting in the production of these autoantibodies; however, unusually, his manifestations emerged with several years' latency. Although this patient's Morvan syndrome-associated seizures were well-controlled with antiepileptic drugs, his neuropathic pain and painful muscle fasciculations did not respond to pharmacological interventions. He refused pain management program treatment, but high-dose immunoglobulin treatment or treatment with rituximab, reported to be sometimes effective in this group, was not initiated because of concerns regarding his general frailty.

Discussion and conclusion: This case highlights issues around the identification and treatment of rare patients with chronic pain who have voltage-gated potassium channel complex autoantibodies; it also emphasizes the possibility that former swine abattoir workers might be at risk of developing neuropathic pain even years after their vocational exposure.

Keywords: Abattoir; CASPR2; Morvan syndrome; Neuropathic pain.

Publication types

  • Case Reports