1. [Autoimmunity and Freiburg classification in common variable immunodeficiency].
- Author
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Herrera-Sánchez DA, López-Moreno NV, Berrón-Ruiz L, Ramos-Blas GJ, Catana-Hernández R, and O'Farrill-Romanillos PM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Autoimmunity, Cross-Sectional Studies, B-Lymphocytes, Common Variable Immunodeficiency complications, Common Variable Immunodeficiency diagnosis, Autoimmune Diseases
- Abstract
Introduction: Up to 25% of patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) debut with autoimmunity, which is related to the Freiburg classification, which is based on flow cytometry., Objective: to determine the frequency and type of autoimmune diseases and their association with the Freiburg classification in adults with CVID., Methods: A cross-sectional, analytical and observational study was carried out with 33 patients belonging to the Primary Immunodeficiency Clinic of a third level hospital, with a diagnosis of CVID. They were divided into 3 phenotypes according to the Freiburg classification., Results: Of the 33 patients studied, 66.6% presented autoimmune diseases, 19 of them (86.3%) had cytopenia; 42.1% belonged to Freiburg group Ia, 36.8% to Ib and 21% to phenotype II. In 36.6% of the patients, autoimmune cytopenia were the first manifestation of CVID; and up to 70% of them belong to the Freiburg phenotype Ia (p = 0.086). Patients with autoimmune cytopenia had a lower percentage of isotype-switched memory B cells (p = 0.018), no higher percentage of CD21low B cells (p = 0.226)., Conclusions: Classification by CVID phenotypes allows the identification of the patient's profile according to the percentage of memory B cells with isotype change, which is useful to intentionally search for non-infectious complications of the disease., (Licencia CC 4.0 (BY-NC-ND) © 2023 Revista Médica del Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social.)
- Published
- 2023
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