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Pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome (PANS) and Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders associated with Streptococcal Infections (PANDAS) in the Context of EMTICS: Methodological Considerations and Misinterpretations

Turowski, P., Fetz, K., Chang, K. et al. Pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome (PANS) and Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders associated with Streptococcal Infections (PANDAS) in the Context of EMTICS: Methodological Considerations and Misinterpretations. Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry 34, 3685–3688 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-025-02747-0

With the identification of biological markers, distinctions between syndromes like PANS and PANDAS may become clinically obsolete, shifting focus to underlying mechanisms rather than clinical presentation.” The authors argue that current labels like PANS and PANDAS are largely symptom-based frameworks that exist because we lack definitive biological tests. As research identifies reliable biomarkers such as immune signatures, autoantibodies, or inflammatory pathways, these distinctions may become less clinically relevant. Instead of categorizing patients by how symptoms present or which trigger is suspected, diagnosis and treatment could shift toward the underlying biological mechanisms driving illness, allowing for more precise, mechanism-based care rather than reliance on descriptive clinical syndromes.

  • EMTICS (European Multicentre Tics in Children Studies) is a large longitudinal study designed to examine environmental risk factors for tic disorders, not to diagnose or test PANS or PANDAS which was not designed, powered, or structured to evaluate PANS/PANDAS, so using it to dismiss these conditions is methodologically incorrect.
  • EMTICS did not systematically assess PANS/PANDAS clinical criteria or timing of infections relative to symptom changes.
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Do you remember the day your child officially got a diagnosis of PANS/PANDAS? Was it your first doctor? Was it your fifth? Were you devastated? Were you relieved to have an answer and the start of a...

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Clinical Evaluation of Youth with Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS): Recommendations from the 2013 PANS Consensus Conference

Kiki Chang, Jennifer Frankovich, Michael Cooperstock, Madeleine W. Cunningham, M. Elizabeth Latimer, Tanya K. Murphy, Mark Pasternack, Margo Thienemann, Kyle Williams, Jolan Walter, and Susan E. Swedo, From the PANS Collaborative Consortium
Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology-2015
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On May 23 and 24, 2013, the First PANS Consensus Conference was convened at Stanford University, calling together a geographically diverse group of clinicians and researchers from complementary fields of pediatrics: General and developmental pediatrics, infectious diseases, immunology, rheumatology, neurology, and child psychiatry. Participants were academicians with clinical and research interests in pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcus (PANDAS) in youth, and the larger category of pediatric acute-onset neuropsychiatric syndrome (PANS). The goals were to clarify the diagnostic boundaries of PANS, to develop systematic strategies for evaluation of suspected PANS cases, and to set forth the most urgently needed studies in this field. Presented here is a consensus statement proposing recommendations for the diagnostic evaluation of youth presenting with PANS.