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Pachymeningitis in granulomatosis with polyangiitis: case series with earlier onset in younger patients and literature review.

The objective of this study is to describe the characteristics of patients with pachymeningitis (PM) in granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) from Latin America, including three young patients. This is a retrospective case series. Patients were classified according to the ACR criteria, the 2012 Chapel Hill Consensus Conference Nomenclature and the EMA algorithm. Demographic, clinical, serological, and neuroimaging characteristics are described. Thirteen patients (nine females, four males) were identified. Mean age ± SD of PM diagnosis was 35.5 ± 20.4 years (median 48, range 8-71 years). Mean time ± SD between GPA first symptom and PM diagnosis was 59.8 ± 70.1 months (median 48, range 2-252 months). An important difference between children and adults was the median time elapsed between first GPA symptoms and PM diagnosis (range 2-4 months vs 5-252 months, respectively). Chronic headache was present in all, followed by intracranial hypertension (n = 5), single cranial nerve palsy and orbital mass (n = 4), seizures (n = 3), cavernous sinus syndrome and multiple cranial nerve palsies (n = 2), and meningism and cerebellar syndrome (n = 1 each). At time of PM diagnosis, mean BVAS/WG (Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score for Wegener's granulomatosis) was 4 ± 2.4 and mean VDI of 2 ± 1.6, mostly due to ENT damage. Gadolinium-enhanced brain MRI showed dural thickening in 12 patients and leptomeningeal enhancement in one. All received a combination of glucocorticoids plus immunosuppressants, rituximab being used favourably in one refractory case. Improvement was observed in 12 patients. Chronic headache should lead to suspect PM. PM predominates in localised GPA. Children may present it earlier in the disease course than adults. Treatment is non-standardised and remains difficult.

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