299 results on '"Freeman AF"'
Search Results
2. Severe BCG-osis Misdiagnosed as Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis in an IL-12Rß1-Deficient Peruvian Girl
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Esteve-Sole A, Sánchez-Dávila SP, Deyà-Martinez A, Freeman AF, Zelazny AM, Dekker JP, Khil PP, Holland SM, Noguera-Julián A, Bustamante J, Casanova JL, Juan M, Cordova W, and Alsina L
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BCG-osis ,Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease (MSMD) ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,multidrug-resistant tuberculosis ,IFN-? ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex ,IL-12Rß1 deficiency ,primary immunodeficiency - Abstract
PURPOSE: Mendelian suceptibility to mycobacterial disease (MSMD) is a rare primary immunodeficiency predisposing to severe disease caused by mycobacteria and other intracellular pathogens. Delay in diagnosis can have an impact on the patient's prognosis. METHODS: We evaluated the IFN-? circuit by studying IFN-? production after mycobacterial challenge as well as IL-12Rß1 expression and STAT4 phosphorylation in response to IL-12p70 stimulation in whole blood of a 6-year-old Peruvian girl with disseminated recurrent mycobacterial infection diagnosed as multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Genetic studies with Sanger sequencing were used to identify the causative mutation. Microbiological studies based on PCR reactions were used to diagnose the specific mycobacterial species. RESULTS: We identified a homozygous mutation in the IL12RB1 gene (p. Arg211*) causing abolished expression of IL-12Rß1 and IL-12 response. MSMD diagnosis led to a microbiological reevaluation of the patient, revealing a BCG vaccine-related infection instead of tuberculosis. Treatment was then adjusted, with good response. CONCLUSIONS: We report the first Peruvian patient with IL-12Rß1 deficiency. Specific mycobacterial species diagnosis within Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex is still challenging in countries with limited access to PCR-based microbiological diagnostic techniques. Awareness of MSMD warning signs and accurate microbiological diagnosis of mycobacterial infections are of the utmost importance for optimal diagnosis and management of affected patients.
- Published
- 2018
3. A biallelic mutation in IL6ST encoding the GP130 co-receptor causes immunodeficiency and craniosynostosis.
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Schwerd, T, Twigg, SRF, Aschenbrenner, D, Manrique, S, Miller, KA, Taylor, IB, Capitani, M, McGowan, SJ, Sweeney, E, Weber, A, Chen, L, Bowness, P, Riordan, A, Cant, A, Freeman, AF, Milner, JD, Holland, SM, Frede, N, Müller, M, Schmidt-Arras, D, Grimbacher, B, Wall, SA, Jones, EY, Wilkie, AOM, Uhlig, HH, Schwerd, T, Twigg, SRF, Aschenbrenner, D, Manrique, S, Miller, KA, Taylor, IB, Capitani, M, McGowan, SJ, Sweeney, E, Weber, A, Chen, L, Bowness, P, Riordan, A, Cant, A, Freeman, AF, Milner, JD, Holland, SM, Frede, N, Müller, M, Schmidt-Arras, D, Grimbacher, B, Wall, SA, Jones, EY, Wilkie, AOM, and Uhlig, HH
- Abstract
Multiple cytokines, including interleukin 6 (IL-6), IL-11, IL-27, oncostatin M (OSM), and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), signal via the common GP130 cytokine receptor subunit. In this study, we describe a patient with a homozygous mutation of IL6ST (encoding GP130 p.N404Y) who presented with recurrent infections, eczema, bronchiectasis, high IgE, eosinophilia, defective B cell memory, and an impaired acute-phase response, as well as skeletal abnormalities including craniosynostosis. The p.N404Y missense substitution is associated with loss of IL-6, IL-11, IL-27, and OSM signaling but a largely intact LIF response. This study identifies a novel immunodeficiency with phenotypic similarities to STAT3 hyper-IgE syndrome caused by loss of function of GP130.
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- 2017
4. Emerging Infections and Pertinent Infections Related to Travel for Patients with Primary Immunodeficiencies
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Sullivan, KE, Bassiri, H, Bousfiha, AA, Costa-Carvalho, BT, Freeman, AF, Hagin, D, Lau, YL, Lionakis, MS, Moreira, I, Pinto, JA, de Moraes-Pinto, MI, Rawat, A, Reda, SM, Lugo Reyes, SO, Seppanen, M, Tang, MLK, Sullivan, KE, Bassiri, H, Bousfiha, AA, Costa-Carvalho, BT, Freeman, AF, Hagin, D, Lau, YL, Lionakis, MS, Moreira, I, Pinto, JA, de Moraes-Pinto, MI, Rawat, A, Reda, SM, Lugo Reyes, SO, Seppanen, M, and Tang, MLK
- Abstract
In today's global economy and affordable vacation travel, it is increasingly important that visitors to another country and their physician be familiar with emerging infections, infections unique to a specific geographic region, and risks related to the process of travel. This is never more important than for patients with primary immunodeficiency disorders (PIDD). A recent review addressing common causes of fever in travelers provides important information for the general population Thwaites and Day (N Engl J Med 376:548-560, 2017). This review covers critical infectious and management concerns specifically related to travel for patients with PIDD. This review will discuss the context of the changing landscape of infections, highlight specific infections of concern, and profile distinct infection phenotypes in patients who are immune compromised. The organization of this review will address the environment driving emerging infections and several concerns unique to patients with PIDD. The first section addresses general considerations, the second section profiles specific infections organized according to mechanism of transmission, and the third section focuses on unique phenotypes and unique susceptibilities in patients with PIDDs. This review does not address most parasitic diseases. Reference tables provide easily accessible information on a broader range of infections than is described in the text.
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- 2017
5. Dock8 Regulates Lymphocyte Shape Integrity For Skin Antiviral Responses
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Zhang, Q, Dove, C, Strauss-Albee, D, Garcia, J, Mandl, J, Grodick, R, Jing, H, Chandler-Brown, D, Kim, E, Murdock, HM, Crawford, GH, Matthews, H, Freeman, AF, Cornall, R, Germain, R, Mueller, SN, Su, H, Zhang, Q, Dove, C, Strauss-Albee, D, Garcia, J, Mandl, J, Grodick, R, Jing, H, Chandler-Brown, D, Kim, E, Murdock, HM, Crawford, GH, Matthews, H, Freeman, AF, Cornall, R, Germain, R, Mueller, SN, and Su, H
- Abstract
DOCK8 mutations result in an inherited combined immunodeficiency characterized by increased susceptibility to skin and other infections. We show that when DOCK8-deficient T and NK cells migrate through confined spaces, they develop cell shape and nuclear deformation abnormalities that do not impair chemotaxis but contribute to a distinct form of catastrophic cell death we term cytothripsis. Such defects arise during lymphocyte migration in collagen-dense tissues when DOCK8, through CDC42 and p21-activated kinase (PAK), is unavailable to coordinate cytoskeletal structures. Cytothripsis of DOCK8-deficient cells prevents the generation of long-lived skin-resident memory CD8 T cells, which in turn impairs control of herpesvirus skin infections. Our results establish that DOCK8-regulated shape integrity of lymphocytes prevents cytothripsis and promotes antiviral immunity in the skin.
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- 2014
6. A2.23 Impaired Natural Killer Cell Function in DOCK8 Deficiency
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Mizesko, MC, primary, Banerjee, PP, additional, Monaco-Shawver, L, additional, Mace, EM, additional, Bernal, W, additional, Sawalle-Belohradsky, J, additional, Belohradsky, B, additional, Heinz, V, additional, Freeman, AF, additional, Sullivan, KE, additional, Holland, SM, additional, Torgerson, TR, additional, Al-Herz, W, additional, Chou, J, additional, Hanson, IC, additional, Albert, MH, additional, Geha, RS, additional, Renner, ED, additional, and Orange, JS, additional
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- 2013
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7. Hyper IgE (Job’s) syndrome: a primary immune deficiency with oral manifestations
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Freeman, AF, primary, Domingo, DL, additional, and Holland, SM, additional
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- 2008
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8. Novel intraoral phenotypes in hyperimmunoglobulin-E syndrome
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Domingo, DL, primary, Freeman, AF, additional, Davis, J, additional, Puck, JM, additional, Tianxia, W, additional, Holland, SM, additional, and Hart, TC, additional
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- 2007
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9. Cutaneous manifestations of DOCK8 deficiency syndrome.
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Chu EY, Freeman AF, Jing H, Cowen EW, Davis J, Su HC, Holland SM, and Turner ML
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Background: Mutations in the dedicator of cytokinesis 8 gene (DOCK8) cause a combined primary immunodeficiency syndrome that is characterized by elevated serum IgE levels, depressed IgM levels, eosinophilia, sinopulmonary infections, cutaneous viral infections, and lymphopenia. Many patients with DOCK8 deficiency were previously thought to have a variant of Job's syndrome. Distinguishing between DOCK8 deficiency and Job's syndrome, also referred to as autosomal dominant hyper- IgE syndrome, on the basis of clinical findings alone is challenging. The discovery of the DOCK8 mutation has made it possible to differentiate the cutaneous manifestations of these hyper-IgE syndromes. Observations: Twenty-one patients from 14 families with confirmed homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in DOCK8 were evaluated. Clinical findings included dermatitis, asthma, food and environmental allergies, recurrent sinopulmonary infections, staphylococcal skin abscesses, and severe cutaneous viral infections. Malignant neoplasms, including aggressive cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, anal and vulvar squamous cell carcinomas, and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, developed in 5 patients during adolescence and young adulthood. Conclusions: DOCK8 deficiency and Job's syndrome share several clinical features, including elevated serum IgE levels, dermatitis, recurrent sinopulmonary infections, and cutaneous staphylococcal abscesses. However, the presence of recalcitrant, widespread cutaneous viral infections, asthma, and food and environmental allergies, as well as the absence of newborn rash and coarse facies, favors the clinical diagnosis of DOCK8 deficiency. Rates of malignancy and overall mortality in patients with DOCK8 deficiency were higher than in those with Job's syndrome, highlighting the value of distinguishing between these conditions and the importance of close monitoring for neoplasia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
10. An Amish boy with recurrent ulcerations of the lower extremities, telangiectases of the hands, and chronic lung disease.
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Kelly JJ, Freeman AF, Wang H, Cowen EW, Kong HH, Kelly, Jeffrey J, Freeman, Alexandra F, Wang, Heng, Cowen, Edward W, and Kong, Heidi H
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- 2010
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11. Antimicrobial prophylaxis for primary immunodeficiencies.
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Freeman AF and Holland SM
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- 2009
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12. Hyper IgE (Job’s) syndrome: a primary immune deficiency with oral manifestations.
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Freeman, AF, Domingo, DL, and Holland, SM
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JOB'S syndrome , *IMMUNOGLOBULIN E , *ORAL manifestations of general diseases , *ORAL mucosa , *THRUSH (Mouth disease) , *ORAL diseases , *IMMUNODEFICIENCY , *ORAL medicine - Abstract
Autosomal dominant hyper IgE (HIES or Job’s) syndrome is a rare primary immune deficiency characterized by eczema, recurrent skin and lung infections, extremely elevated serum IgE, and a variety of connective tissue and skeletal abnormalities. Individuals with HIES share a characteristic facial appearance and many oral manifestations including retained primary dentition, a high arched palate, variations of the oral mucosa and gingiva, and recurrent oral candidiasis. Mutations in STAT3 account for the majority, if not all, of the cases of autosomal dominant HIES, but the pathogenesis of the many varied features remains poorly understood. In this review, we discuss the clinical phenotype of HIES including immunologic and non-immunologic features, the genetics of HIES, and treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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13. Hyper IgE syndrome: an update on clinical aspects and the role of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3.
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Paulson ML, Freeman AF, and Holland SM
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- 2008
14. Virologic response using directly observed therapy in adolescents with HIV: an adherence tool.
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Purdy JB, Freeman AF, Martin SC, Ryder C, Elliott-Desorbo DK, Zeichner S, and Hazra R
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Virologic response to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) treatment of HIV infection depends on viral sensitivity to antiretrovirals and excellent medication adherence. Adolescents with vertically acquired HIV may require complicated regimens because of significant treatment experience and often have poor medication adherence. A retrospective chart review identified five adolescents with vertically acquired HIV and plasma HIV viral load rebound or nonresponse on a stable HAART regimen followed by a period of directly observed therapy (DOT) in a clinic or hospital setting with serial viral load measurements. Four subjects had a virologic response (mean decline, 1.15 log(10)) after DOT. A response to HAART can be seen despite antiretrovirals resistance using DOT and treatment-experienced patients seemingly unresponsive to HAART may be nonadherent even with reassuring adherence measures. A period of clinic-monitored DOT may allow diagnosis of nonadherence, discussion of medication barriers, and avoidance of unnecessary medication changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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15. Novel intraoral phenotypes in hyperimmunoglobulin-E syndrome.
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Domingo DL, Freeman AF, Davis J, Puck JM, Tianxia W, Holland SM, and Hart TC
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AIM: Hyperimmunoglobulin-E syndrome (HIES) is a primary immunodeficiency characterized by eczema, recurrent skin and lung infections with pneumatocoele formation, and extremely elevated serum immunoglobulin-E. The precise immunologic defect and genetic etiology remain unknown. Non-immunologic findings include characteristic facial features (prominent forehead, fleshy nasal tip, and increased interalar distance); skeletal involvement (pathological fractures, scoliosis, and craniosynostosis); and retention of primary teeth. This study aims to characterize intraoral soft tissue findings in HIES patients. METHODS: Sixty HIES patients (4-54 years, 27 males, 33 females) received intraoral and radiographic evaluations. Chronological dental development was also assessed. RESULTS: Lesions of the hard palate and dorsal tongue were found in 55% and 60% of patients, respectively. Palatal lesions ranged from a generalized surface keratosis to a midline sagittal fibrotic bridge. Tongue lesions consisted of multiple fissures and a midline cleft. On the lip and buccal mucosa, keratotic plaques and/or surface fissures were found in 8% and 23% of patients, respectively. Manifested in 76.7% of patients, the intraoral lesions were significantly more prevalent than the characteristic facial traits (P=0.0013). CONCLUSIONS: Alterations in oral mucosa and gingiva were present in the majority of HIES patients. These novel intraoral findings may facilitate the diagnosis of HIES. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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16. Kawasaki disease: summary of the American Heart Association guidelines.
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Freeman AF and Shulman ST
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Kawasaki disease is an acute vasculitis of childhood that predominantly affects the coronary arteries. The etiology of Kawasaki disease remains unknown, although an infectious agent is strongly suspected based on clinical and epidemiologic features. A genetic predisposition is also likely, based on varying incidences among ethnic groups, with higher rates in Asians. Symptoms include fever, conjunctival injection, erythema of the lips and oral mucosa, rash, and cervical lymphadenopathy. Some children with Kawasaki disease develop coronary artery aneurysms or ectasia, ischemic heart disease, and sudden death. Kawasaki disease is the leading cause of acquired heart disease among children in developed countries. This article provides a summary of the diagnostic and treatment guidelines published by the American Heart Association. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
17. A biallelic mutation in IL6ST encoding the GP130 co-receptor causes immunodeficiency and craniosynostosis
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Schwerd, T, Twigg, SRF, Aschenbrenner, D, Manrique, S, Miller, KA, Taylor, IB, Capitani, M, McGowan, SJ, Sweeney, E, Weber, A, Chen, L, Bowness, P, Riordan, A, Cant, A, Freeman, AF, Milner, JD, Holland, SM, Frede, N, Müller, M, Schmidt-Arras, D, Grimbache, B, Wall, SA, Jones, EY, Wilkie, AOM, and Uhlig, HH
- Abstract
Multiple cytokines, including interleukin 6 (IL-6), IL-11, IL-27, oncostatin M (OSM), and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), signal via the common GP130 cytokine receptor subunit. In this study, we describe a patient with a homozygous mutation of IL6ST (encoding GP130 p.N404Y) who presented with recurrent infections, eczema, bronchiectasis, high IgE, eosinophilia, defective B cell memory, and an impaired acute-phase response, as well as skeletal abnormalities including craniosynostosis. The p.N404Y missense substitution is associated with loss of IL-6, IL-11, IL-27, and OSM signaling but a largely intact LIF response. This study identifies a novel immunodeficiency with phenotypic similarities to STAT3 hyper-IgE syndrome caused by loss of function of GP130.
18. Perturbations of the T-cell receptor repertoire in response to SARS-CoV-2 in immunocompetent and immunocompromised individuals
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Delmonte, OM, primary, Oguz, C, additional, Dobbs, K, additional, Myint-Hpu, K, additional, Palterer, B, additional, Abers, MS, additional, Draper, D, additional, Truong, M, additional, Kaplan, IM, additional, Gittelman, RM, additional, Zhang, Y, additional, Rosen, LB, additional, Snow, AL, additional, Dalgard, CL, additional, Burbelo, PD, additional, Imberti, L, additional, Sottini, A, additional, Quiros-Roldan, E, additional, Castelli, F, additional, Rossi, C, additional, Brugoni, D, additional, Biondi, A, additional, Bettini, LR, additional, Zhang, D'Angio', additional, Bonfanti, P, additional, Anderson, MV, additional, Saracino, A, additional, Chironna, M, additional, Di Stefano, M, additional, Fiore, JR, additional, Santantonio, T, additional, Castagnoli, R, additional, Marseglia, GL, additional, Magliocco, M, additional, Bosticardo, M, additional, Pala, F, additional, Shaw, E, additional, Matthrews, H, additional, Weber, SE, additional, Xirasagar, S, additional, Barnett, J, additional, Oler, AJ, additional, Dimitrova, D, additional, Bergerson, JRE, additional, McDermott, DH, additional, Rao, VK, additional, Murphy, PM, additional, Holland, SM, additional, Lisco, A, additional, Su, HC, additional, Lionakis, MS, additional, Cohen, JI, additional, Freeman, AF, additional, Snyder, TM, additional, Lack, J, additional, and Notarangelo, LD, additional
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19. SASH3 variants cause a novel form of X-linked combined immunodeficiency with immune dysregulation
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Delmonte, OM, primary, Bergerson, JRM, additional, Kawai, T, additional, Kuehn, HS, additional, McDermott, DH, additional, Cortese, I, additional, Zimmermann, MT, additional, Dobbs, K, additional, Bosticardo, M, additional, Fink, D, additional, Majumdar, S, additional, Palterer, B, additional, Pala, F, additional, Dsouza, NR, additional, Pouzolles, M, additional, Taylor, N, additional, Calvo, KR, additional, Daley, SR, additional, Velez, DS, additional, Agharahimi, A, additional, Mint-Hpu, K, additional, Dropulic, L, additional, Lyons, JJ, additional, Holland, SM, additional, Freeman, AF, additional, Ghosh, R, additional, Similuk, MN, additional, Niemela, JE, additional, Stoddard, JL, additional, Kuhns, DB, additional, Urrutia, R, additional, Rosenzweig, S, additional, Walkiewicz, MA, additional, Murphy, P, additional, and Notarangelo, LD, additional
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20. Highly Variable Clinical Phenotypes of Hypomorphic RAG1 Mutations.
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Avila EM, Uzel G, Hsu A, Mimer JD, Turner ML, Pittaluga S, Freeman AF, and Holland SM
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- 2010
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21. Brain abnormalities in patients with hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome.
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Freeman AF, Collura-Burke CJ, Patronas NJ, Ilcus LS, Darnell D, Davis J, Puck JM, and Holland SM
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OBJECTIVES: Hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome is a multisystem disorder with abnormalities of the immunologic, connective tissue, and skeletal tissue systems. Central nervous system abnormalities have not been considered a feature of hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome. We aimed to determine whether central nervous system abnormalities detected on brain MRI exist in hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome and to characterize any identified abnormalities. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Fifty patients aged from 3 to 52 years (mean: 24 years) with established diagnoses of hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome had MRI of the brain as part of an hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome natural history protocol. Abnormalities were described, measured, counted, and mapped. Patient charts were reviewed for neurologic findings and blood pressure measurements. RESULTS: Focal brain lesions exhibiting high signal intensities on flow-attenuated inversion recovery and on T2-weighted techniques were found in 35 of the 50 patients. The focal hyperintensities were predominantly in the white matter of the cerebral hemispheres, and the number ranged from 2 to >50. The hyperintensities occurred more frequently in adults than in children, and no association with elevated blood pressure was found. Five patients had lacunar infarctions. Chiari type 1 malformations were found in 9 of 50 patients. Two patients had infectious complications presenting on MRI as cerebritis in 1 patient and as a hemorrhagic infarct in the other; both were found on autopsy to be fungal. Neurologic abnormalities were present in 1 patient with a lacunar infarction, the 2 patients with infectious complications, and in 1 patient with a subarachnoid hemorrhage secondary to a berry aneurysm. CONCLUSIONS: Central nervous system abnormalities are common in hyperimmunoglobulin E syndrome. Focal T2 hyperintensities, not appreciated previously, represent a prominent feature of this rare disease that may assist in diagnosis. The etiology and clinical implications of these abnormalities remain to be investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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22. Pneumocystis jiroveci infection in patients with hyper-immunoglobulin E syndrome.
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Freeman AF, Davis J, Anderson VL, Barson W, Darnell DN, Puck JM, and Holland SM
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The hyper-immunoglobulin E syndrome is a primary immunodeficiency characterized by recurrent pyogenic skin and lung abscesses, dermatitis, and elevated serum immunoglobulin E levels. Pneumocystis jiroveci (formerly Pneumocystis carinii) is not typically associated with hyper-immunoglobulin E syndrome. We identified 7 patients with hyper-immunoglobulin E syndrome with P. jiroveci detected in respiratory or pulmonary pathology specimens. In 5 patients it was the sole pathogen, and in 2 other patients it contributed to a polymicrobial etiology. No consistent prophylaxis was given, and there have been no recurrences on long-term follow-up. Our experience suggests that P. jiroveci can cause pneumonia in patients with hyper-immunoglobulin E syndrome both with and without chronic lung disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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23. A new complication of stem cell transplantation: measles inclusion body encephalitis.
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Freeman AF, Jacobsohn DA, Shulman ST, Bellini WJ, Jaggi P, de Leon G, Keating GF, Kim F, Pachman LM, Kletzel M, and Duerst RE
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Measles inclusion body encephalitis (MIBE) is a disease of the immunocompromised host and typically occurs within 1 year of acute measles infection or vaccination. We report a 13-year-old boy who had chronic granulomatous disease and presented 38 days after stem cell transplantation with afebrile focal seizures that progressed despite multiple anticonvulsants. After an extensive diagnostic evaluation, brain biopsy was performed, revealing numerous intranuclear inclusion bodies consistent with paramyxovirus nucleocapsids. Measles studies including reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and viral growth confirmed measles virus, genotype D3. Immunohistochemistry was positive for measles nucleoprotein. Despite intravenous ribavirin therapy, the patient died. MIBE has not been described in stem cell recipients but is a disease of immunocompromised hosts and typically occurs within 1 year of measles infection, exposure, or vaccination. Our case is unusual as neither the patient nor the stem cell donor had apparent recent measles exposure or vaccination, and neither had recent travel to measles-endemic regions. The patient had an erythematous rash several weeks before the neurologic symptoms; however, skin biopsy was consistent with graft-versus-host disease, and immunohistochemistry studies for measles nucleoprotein were negative. As measles genotype D3 has not been seen in areas where the child lived since his early childhood, the possibility of an unusually long latency period between initial measles infection and MIBE is raised. In addition, this case demonstrates the utility of brain biopsy in the diagnosis of encephalitis of unknown cause in the immunocompromised host. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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24. STAT3 mutations in the hyper-IgE syndrome.
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Holland SM, DeLeo FR, Elloumi HZ, Hsu AP, Uzel G, Brodsky N, Freeman AF, Demidowich A, Davis J, Turner ML, Anderson VL, Darnell DN, Welch PA, Kuhns DB, Frucht DM, Malech HL, Gallin JI, Kobayashi SD, Whitney AR, and Voyich JM
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- 2007
25. Safety but limited efficacy of donor lymphocyte infusion for post-transplantation cyclophosphamide-treated patients.
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Shanmugasundaram K, Napier S, Dimitrova D, Stokes A, Wilder J, Chai A, Lisco A, Anderson MV, Sereti I, Uzel G, Freeman AF, McKeown C, Sponaugle J, Sabina R, Rechache K, Hyder MA, Kanakry JA, and Kanakry CG
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Transplantation Conditioning methods, Young Adult, Adolescent, Tissue Donors, Allografts, Cyclophosphamide therapeutic use, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation methods, Lymphocyte Transfusion, Graft vs Host Disease prevention & control, Graft vs Host Disease etiology
- Abstract
The therapeutic efficacy of donor lymphocyte infusions (DLIs) given after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is limited by risk of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) effectively prevents severe GVHD, but there are limited data on outcomes of DLIs given to PTCy-treated patients. We reviewed 162 consecutive PTCy-treated patients transplanted between 2015-2022 within the Center for Immuno-Oncology at the National Cancer Institute. Of 38 DLIs given to 21 patients after 22 HCTs, few DLIs were associated with toxicities of acute GVHD (7.8%), cytokine release syndrome (CRS, 7.8%), or chronic GVHD (2.6%), and all occurred in those receiving serotherapy-containing pre-HCT conditioning (50% of HCTs). Seven DLIs resulted in complete response (18.4%), with 5 of these given after HCTs using serotherapy-containing conditioning. Excluding infectious indications, complete response to DLIs given after transplants with versus without serotherapy-containing pre-HCT conditioning were 30% and 4.3%, respectively. Two patients received DLI for infection and experienced complete resolution without GVHD or CRS, although the efficacy cannot be definitively attributable to the DLI. DLIs given to PTCy-treated patients had low toxicity but limited efficacy, although pre-HCT serotherapy may modulate both toxicity and response. Novel strategies are needed to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of post-transplant cellular therapies without aggravating GVHD., (© 2024. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2024
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26. JAK-STAT signaling pathway, immunodeficiency, inflammation, immune dysregulation, and inborn errors of immunity.
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Samra S, Bergerson JRE, Freeman AF, and Turvey SE
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The Janus kinase-signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK-STAT) signaling cascade is an evolutionarily conserved signal transduction pathway that regulates many vital cellular processes, including immune function and hematopoiesis. Human genetic variants that disrupt JAK-STAT signaling are being found to cause a rapidly increasing number of diseases, including both germline-encoded inborn errors of immunity (IEI) and acquired somatic variants, causing a so-called phenocopy of the IEI. Multiple genetic mechanisms are responsible for this growing group of JAK-STAT diseases including loss-of-function, gain-of-function, and dominant negative effects. In this review, we discuss the clinical presentation and pathogenesis of all currently described JAK-STAT defects, as well as provide an overview of the guiding principles to consider in diagnosing and treating these conditions., Competing Interests: Disclosure statement S.E.T. holds a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in pediatric precision health and is the Aubrey J. Tingle Professor of Pediatric Immunology. S.S. is supported by a University of British Columbia Four Year Doctoral Fellowship. This work was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (PJT-178054 to S.E.T.) and Genome British Columbia (SIP007 to S.E.T.). This work was also supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health. Disclosure of potential conflict of interest: The authors declare that they have no relevant conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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27. Germline mutations in a G protein identify signaling cross-talk in T cells.
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Ham H, Jing H, Lamborn IT, Kober MM, Koval A, Berchiche YA, Anderson DE, Druey KM, Mandl JN, Isidor B, Ferreira CR, Freeman AF, Ganesan S, Karsak M, Mustillo PJ, Teo J, Zolkipli-Cunningham Z, Chatron N, Lecoquierre F, Oler AJ, Schmid JP, Kuhns DB, Xu X, Hauck F, Al-Herz W, Wagner M, Terhal PA, Muurinen M, Barlogis V, Cruz P, Danielson J, Stewart H, Loid P, Rading S, Keren B, Pfundt R, Zarember KA, Vill K, Potocki L, Olivier KN, Lesca G, Faivre L, Wong M, Puel A, Chou J, Tusseau M, Moutsopoulos NM, Matthews HF, Simons C, Taft RJ, Soldatos A, Masle-Farquhar E, Pittaluga S, Brink R, Fink DL, Kong HH, Kabat J, Kim WS, Bierhals T, Meguro K, Hsu AP, Gu J, Stoddard J, Banos-Pinero B, Slack M, Trivellin G, Mazel B, Soomann M, Li S, Watts VJ, Stratakis CA, Rodriguez-Quevedo MF, Bruel AL, Lipsanen-Nyman M, Saultier P, Jain R, Lehalle D, Torres D, Sullivan KE, Barbarot S, Neu A, Duffourd Y, Similuk M, McWalter K, Blanc P, Bézieau S, Jin T, Geha RS, Casanova JL, Makitie OM, Kubisch C, Edery P, Christodoulou J, Germain RN, Goodnow CC, Sakmar TP, Billadeau DD, Küry S, Katanaev VL, Zhang Y, Lenardo MJ, and Su HC
- Subjects
- Humans, Cell Movement genetics, Cell Proliferation, Immunity genetics, MAP Kinase Signaling System, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases metabolism, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt metabolism, ras Proteins metabolism, ras Proteins genetics, Signal Transduction, Pedigree, Germ-Line Mutation, GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunit, Gi2 genetics, ras GTPase-Activating Proteins genetics, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell metabolism, T-Lymphocytes immunology, T-Lymphocytes metabolism
- Abstract
Humans with monogenic inborn errors responsible for extreme disease phenotypes can reveal essential physiological pathways. We investigated germline mutations in GNAI2 , which encodes G
αi2 , a key component in heterotrimeric G protein signal transduction usually thought to regulate adenylyl cyclase-mediated cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) production. Patients with activating Gαi2 mutations had clinical presentations that included impaired immunity. Mutant Gαi2 impaired cell migration and augmented responses to T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation. We found that mutant Gαi2 influenced TCR signaling by sequestering the guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase)-activating protein RASA2, thereby promoting RAS activation and increasing downstream extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT S6 signaling to drive cellular growth and proliferation.- Published
- 2024
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28. Hematopoietic cell transplantation for DOCK8 deficiency: Results from a prospective clinical trial.
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Freeman AF, Gonzalez CE, Yates B, Cole K, Little L, Flannelly E, Steinberg SM, Mo G, Piette N, Hughes TE, Cuellar-Rodriguez J, Gea-Banacloche J, Heller T, Hammoud DA, Holland SM, Kong HH, Young FD, Jing H, Kayaoglu B, Su HC, Pai SY, Hickstein DD, and Shah NN
- Abstract
Background: DOCK8 deficiency is a primary immunodeficiency in which allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) represents the only known cure. We tested the ability of a busulfan-based regimen to achieve reliable engraftment and high levels of donor chimerism with acceptable toxicity in a prospective clinical trial in DOCK8 deficiency., Objectives: To both evaluate the ability of HCT to reverse the clinical phenotype and to correct the immunologic abnormalities by 1 year post HCT., Methods: We conducted a prospective HCT trial for recipients with DOCK8 deficiency. Subjects were recruited from October 5, 2010, to December 30, 2022. Donor sources included fully matched related and unrelated donors and haploidentical donors. The reduced toxicity, myeloablative conditioning regimen contained no serotherapy. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis included either a calcineurin inhibitor with methotrexate or post-HCT cyclophosphamide (PT/Cy) followed by tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil. The trial was later amended to study PT/Cy in all patients. (Pilot Study of Reduced-Intensity Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant of DOCK8 [NCT01176006].) RESULTS: Thirty-six subjects, both children and adults (median age 16.4 years), underwent HCT for DOCK8 deficiency. Most patients, 33 of 36 (92%), achieved full (≥98%) donor chimerism in whole blood as early as day +30. With a median potential follow-up of 7.4 years, 29 (80.6%) were alive with no evidence of new DOCK8 deficiency-related complications. PT/Cy was effective in reducing the risk of acute GVHD in patients who had received matched unrelated donor and haploidentical transplants, but it was associated with transient delays in immune-reconstitution and hemorrhagic cystitis., Conclusions: A busulfan-based HCT regimen using PT/Cy for GVHD prophylaxis and a broad range of donor types and hematopoietic cell sources were well tolerated, leading to the reversal of the clinical immunophenotype., Competing Interests: Disclosure statement This work was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health; National Cancer Institute; Center for Cancer Research; the Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center (ZIA BC 011823 to N. Shah, ZID BC 012026 to S.-Y. Pai); National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (1ZIAAI001193 to H. Su); National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases; and National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the views of policies of the Department of Health and Human Services, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the US government. Disclosure of potential conflict of interest: The authors declare that they have no relevant conflicts of interest., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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29. A unified metric of human immune health.
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Sparks R, Rachmaninoff N, Lau WW, Hirsch DC, Bansal N, Martins AJ, Chen J, Liu CC, Cheung F, Failla LE, Biancotto A, Fantoni G, Sellers BA, Chawla DG, Howe KN, Mostaghimi D, Farmer R, Kotliarov Y, Calvo KR, Palmer C, Daub J, Foruraghi L, Kreuzburg S, Treat JD, Urban AK, Jones A, Romeo T, Deuitch NT, Moura NS, Weinstein B, Moir S, Ferrucci L, Barron KS, Aksentijevich I, Kleinstein SH, Townsley DM, Young NS, Frischmeyer-Guerrerio PA, Uzel G, Pinto-Patarroyo GP, Cudrici CD, Hoffmann P, Stone DL, Ombrello AK, Freeman AF, Zerbe CS, Kastner DL, Holland SM, and Tsang JS
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Young Adult, Aging immunology, Aging genetics, Machine Learning, Adolescent, Case-Control Studies, Immune System Diseases immunology, Immune System Diseases genetics, Transcriptome, Biomarkers blood
- Abstract
Immunological health has been challenging to characterize but could be defined as the absence of immune pathology. While shared features of some immune diseases and the concept of immunologic resilience based on age-independent adaptation to antigenic stimulation have been developed, general metrics of immune health and its utility for assessing clinically healthy individuals remain ill defined. Here we integrated transcriptomics, serum protein, peripheral immune cell frequency and clinical data from 228 patients with 22 monogenic conditions impacting key immunological pathways together with 42 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Despite the high penetrance of monogenic lesions, differences between individuals in diverse immune parameters tended to dominate over those attributable to disease conditions or medication use. Unsupervised or supervised machine learning independently identified a score that distinguished healthy participants from patients with monogenic diseases, thus suggesting a quantitative immune health metric (IHM). In ten independent datasets, the IHM discriminated healthy from polygenic autoimmune and inflammatory disease states, marked aging in clinically healthy individuals, tracked disease activities and treatment responses in both immunological and nonimmunological diseases, and predicted age-dependent antibody responses to immunizations with different vaccines. This discriminatory power goes beyond that of the classical inflammatory biomarkers C-reactive protein and interleukin-6. Thus, deviations from health in diverse conditions, including aging, have shared systemic immune consequences, and we provide a web platform for calculating the IHM for other datasets, which could empower precision medicine., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
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- 2024
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30. STAT1 and STAT3 gain of function: clinically heterogenous immune regulatory disorders.
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Olbrich P and Freeman AF
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- Humans, Animals, Autoimmunity immunology, Autoimmune Diseases immunology, Autoimmune Diseases genetics, Interleukin-6 immunology, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Janus Kinases metabolism, Janus Kinases immunology, STAT1 Transcription Factor metabolism, STAT1 Transcription Factor genetics, STAT3 Transcription Factor metabolism, STAT3 Transcription Factor immunology, STAT3 Transcription Factor genetics, Gain of Function Mutation, Candidiasis, Chronic Mucocutaneous immunology, Candidiasis, Chronic Mucocutaneous genetics, Signal Transduction immunology
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Purpose of Review: The identification of STAT1 gain-of-function (GOF) in 2011 and STAT3 GOF in 2014 has advanced our understanding of the host immunity along the JAK/STAT pathway and allowed targeted treatment approaches. We review the clinical features and pathogenesis of STAT1 and STAT3 GOF and how this has shaped new approaches to therapy., Recent Findings: STAT1 GOF, initially described in patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) and autoimmune thyroid disease, is now recognized to cause early-onset multisystem autoimmunity and a range of infections. STAT3 GOF comprises mostly lymphoproliferation and autoimmunity but also with varying severity, including some with life threatening organ dysfunction. Treatment has evolved along with the understanding of the pathogenesis, with patients now receiving JAK inhibition to block upstream of the STAT defect with good response in autoimmunity and CMC in STAT1 GOF. Blockade of IL-6 signaling has also been used in STAT3 GOF. Hematopoietic cell transplantation had initial poor outcomes, but outcomes are now improving with focus on the control of inflammation pretransplant., Summary: Understanding the pathogenesis of STAT1 and STAT3 GOF has allowed great recent advancements in therapy, but many questions remain as to the best approach to therapy for each patient's clinical presentation as well as the durability of these therapies., (Copyright © Written work prepared by employees of the Federal Government as part of their official duties is, under the U.S. Copyright Act, a “work of the United States Government” for which copyright protection under Title 17 of the United States Code is not available. As such, copyright does not extend to the contributions of employees of the Federal Government.)
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- 2024
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31. Dysregulated Airway Host Defense in Hyper IgE Syndrome due to STAT3 Mutations.
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Sun L, Walls SA, Dang H, Quinney NL, Sears PR, Sadritabrizi T, Hasegawa K, Okuda K, Asakura T, Chang X, Zheng M, Mikami Y, Dizmond FU, Danilova D, Zhou L, Deshmukh A, Cholon DM, Radicioni G, Rogers TD, Kissner WJ, Markovetz MR, Guhr Lee TN, Gutay MI, Esther CR, Chua M, Grubb BR, Ehre C, Kesimer M, Hill DB, Ostrowski LE, Button B, Gentzsch M, Robinson C, Olivier KN, Freeman AF, Randell SH, O'Neal WK, Boucher RC, and Chen G
- Abstract
Rationale: Hyper IgE syndrome (STAT3-HIES), also known as Job's syndrome, is a rare immunodeficiency disease typically caused by dominant-negative STAT3 mutations. STAT3-HIES syndrome is characterized by chronic pulmonary infection and inflammation, suggesting impairment of pulmonary innate host defense., Objectives: To identify airway epithelial host defense defects consequent to STAT3 mutations that, in addition to reported mutant STAT3 immunologic abnormalities, produce pulmonary infection., Methods: STAT3-HIES sputum was evaluated for biochemical/biophysical properties. STAT3-HIES excised lungs were harvested for histology; bronchial brush samples were collected for RNA sequencing and in vitro culture. A STAT3-HIES-specific mutation (R382W), expressed by lentiviruses, and a STAT3 knockout, generated by CRISPR/Cas9, were maintained in normal human bronchial epithelia under basal or inflammatory (IL1β) conditions. Effects of STAT3 deficiency on transcriptomics, and epithelial ion channel, secretory, antimicrobial, and ciliary functions were assessed., Measurements and Main Results: Mucus concentrations and viscoelasticity were increased in STAT3-HIES sputum. STAT3-HIES excised lungs exhibited mucus obstruction and elevated IL1β expression. STAT3 deficiency impaired CFTR-dependent fluid and mucin secretion, inhibited expression of antimicrobial peptides, cytokines, and chemokines, and acidified airway surface liquid at baseline and post-IL1β exposure in vitro. Notably, mutant STAT3 suppressed IL1R1 expression. STAT3 mutations also inhibited ciliogenesis in vivo and impaired mucociliary transport in vitro, a process mediated via HES6 suppression. Administration of a γ-secretase inhibitor increased HES6 expression and improved ciliogenesis in STAT3 R382W mutant cells., Conclusions: STAT3 dysfunction leads to multi-component defects in airway epithelial innate defense, which, in conjunction with STAT3-HIES immune deficiency, contributes to chronic pulmonary infection.
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- 2024
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32. T H 2-driven manifestations of inborn errors of immunity.
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James AE, Abdalgani M, Khoury P, Freeman AF, and Milner JD
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- Humans, Animals, Hypersensitivity immunology, Hypersensitivity genetics, Cytokines immunology, Th2 Cells immunology
- Abstract
Monogenic lesions in pathways critical for effector functions responsible for immune surveillance, protection against autoinflammation, and appropriate responses to allergens and microorganisms underlie the pathophysiology of inborn errors of immunity (IEI). Variants in cytokine production, cytokine signaling, epithelial barrier function, antigen presentation, receptor signaling, and cellular processes and metabolism can drive autoimmunity, immunodeficiency, and/or allergic inflammation. Identification of these variants has improved our understanding of the role that many of these proteins play in skewing toward T
H 2-related allergic inflammation. Early-onset or atypical atopic disease, often in conjunction with immunodeficiency and/or autoimmunity, should raise suspicion for an IEI. This becomes a diagnostic dilemma if the initial clinical presentation is solely allergic inflammation, especially when the prevalence of allergic diseases is becoming more common. Genetic sequencing is necessary for IEI diagnosis and is helpful for early recognition and implementation of targeted treatment, if available. Although genetic evaluation is not feasible for all patients with atopy, identifying atopic patients with molecular immune abnormalities may be helpful for diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic purposes. In this review, we focus on IEI associated with TH 2-driven allergic manifestations and classify them on the basis of the affected molecular pathways and predominant clinical manifestations., Competing Interests: Disclosure statement This work was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health. Disclosure of potential conflict of interest: J. D. Milner served on the scientific advisory board for Blueprint Medicine. The rest of the authors declare that they have no relevant conflicts of interest., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)- Published
- 2024
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33. Lymphocyte-Directed Immunomodulation Remits Thymoma-Associated Autoimmune Pneumonitis.
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Ferré EMN, Nichols-Vinueza DX, Rosen LB, Burbelo PD, Fennelly KP, Pechacek J, Goldstein DM, Agharahimi A, Saksena A, Kleiner DE, Demirdag YY, Rajan A, Schrump DS, Holland SM, Freeman AF, and Lionakis MS
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- Humans, Female, Male, Rituximab therapeutic use, Autoantibodies immunology, Middle Aged, Thymus Neoplasms immunology, Thymus Neoplasms complications, Thymus Neoplasms diagnosis, Pneumonia etiology, Pneumonia immunology, Pneumonia diagnosis, Autoimmune Diseases immunology, Autoimmune Diseases diagnosis, Autoimmune Diseases etiology, Adult, Azathioprine therapeutic use, B-Lymphocytes immunology, Treatment Outcome, T-Lymphocytes immunology, Thymoma immunology, Thymoma complications, Thymoma diagnosis, Immunomodulation
- Abstract
Background: Thymoma presents with several autoimmune manifestations and is associated with secondary autoimmune regulator (AIRE) deficiency. Pneumonitis has recently been described as an autoimmune manifestation associated with thymoma presenting with similar clinical, radiographic, histological, and autoantibody features as seen in patients with inherited AIRE deficiency who suffer from Autoimmune PolyEndocrinopathy-Candidiasis-Ectodermal Dystrophy (APECED) syndrome., Objectives: To treat two patients with biopsy-proven thymoma-associated pneumonitis with lymphocyte-directed immunomodulation., Methods: Two patients with thymoma were enrolled on IRB-approved protocols at the NIH Clinical Center. We performed history and physical examination; laboratory, radiographic, histologic and pulmonary function evaluations; and measurement of the lung-directed autoantibodies KCNRG and BPIFB1 prior to and at 1- and 6-months following initiation of lymphocyte-directed immunomodulation with azathioprine with or without rituximab., Results: Combination T- and B-lymphocyte-directed immunomodulation resulted in improvement of clinical, functional, and radiographic parameters at 6-month follow-up evaluations in both patients with sustained remission up to 12-36 months following treatment initiation., Conclusion: Lymphocyte-directed immunomodulation remitted autoimmune pneumonitis in two patients with thymoma., (© 2024. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2024
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34. Dysregulated STAT3 signaling and T cell immunometabolic dysfunction define a targetable, high mortality subphenotype of critically ill children.
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Lindell RB, Sayed S, Campos JS, Knight M, Mauracher AA, Hay CA, Conrey PE, Fitzgerald JC, Yehya N, Famularo ST, Arroyo T, Tustin R, Fazelinia H, Behrens EM, Teachey DT, Freeman AF, Bergerson JRE, Holland SM, Leiding JW, Weiss SL, Hall MW, Zuppa AF, Taylor DM, Feng R, Wherry EJ, Meyer NJ, and Henrickson SE
- Abstract
Sepsis is the leading cause of death of hospitalized children worldwide. Despite the established link between immune dysregulation and mortality in pediatric sepsis, it remains unclear which host immune factors contribute causally to adverse sepsis outcomes. Identifying modifiable pathobiology is an essential first step to successful translation of biologic insights into precision therapeutics. We designed a prospective, longitudinal cohort study of 88 critically ill pediatric patients with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS), including patients with and without sepsis, to define subphenotypes associated with targetable mechanisms of immune dysregulation. We first assessed plasma proteomic profiles and identified shared features of immune dysregulation in MODS patients with and without sepsis. We then employed consensus clustering to define three subphenotypes based on protein expression at disease onset and identified a strong association between subphenotype and clinical outcome. We next identified differences in immune cell frequency and activation state by MODS subphenotype and determined the association between hyperinflammatory pathway activation and cellular immunophenotype. Using single cell transcriptomics, we demonstrated STAT3 hyperactivation in lymphocytes from the sickest MODS subgroup and then identified an association between STAT3 hyperactivation and T cell immunometabolic dysregulation. Finally, we compared proteomics findings between patients with MODS and patients with inborn errors of immunity that amplify cytokine signaling pathways to further assess the impact of STAT3 hyperactivation in the most severe patients with MODS. Overall, these results identify a potentially pathologic and targetable role for STAT3 hyperactivation in a subset of pediatric patients with MODS who have high severity of illness and poor prognosis.
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- 2024
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35. Perturbations of the T-cell receptor repertoire in response to SARS-CoV-2 in immunocompetent and immunocompromised individuals.
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Delmonte OM, Oguz C, Dobbs K, Myint-Hpu K, Palterer B, Abers MS, Draper D, Truong M, Kaplan IM, Gittelman RM, Zhang Y, Rosen LB, Snow AL, Dalgard CL, Burbelo PD, Imberti L, Sottini A, Quiros-Roldan E, Castelli F, Rossi C, Brugnoni D, Biondi A, Bettini LR, D'Angio M, Bonfanti P, Anderson MV, Saracino A, Chironna M, Di Stefano M, Fiore JR, Santantonio T, Castagnoli R, Marseglia GL, Magliocco M, Bosticardo M, Pala F, Shaw E, Matthews H, Weber SE, Xirasagar S, Barnett J, Oler AJ, Dimitrova D, Bergerson JRE, McDermott DH, Rao VK, Murphy PM, Holland SM, Lisco A, Su HC, Lionakis MS, Cohen JI, Freeman AF, Snyder TM, Lack J, and Notarangelo LD
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Adult, Aged, T-Lymphocytes immunology, COVID-19 Vaccines immunology, Immunocompetence immunology, COVID-19 immunology, SARS-CoV-2 immunology, Immunocompromised Host immunology
- Abstract
Background: Functional T-cell responses are essential for virus clearance and long-term protection after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, whereas certain clinical factors, such as older age and immunocompromise, are associated with worse outcome., Objective: We sought to study the breadth and magnitude of T-cell responses in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and in individuals with inborn errors of immunity (IEIs) who had received COVID-19 mRNA vaccine., Methods: Using high-throughput sequencing and bioinformatics tools to characterize the T-cell receptor β repertoire signatures in 540 individuals after SARS-CoV-2 infection, 31 IEI recipients of COVID-19 mRNA vaccine, and healthy controls, we quantified HLA class I- and class II-restricted SARS-CoV-2-specific responses and also identified several HLA allele-clonotype motif associations in patients with COVID-19, including a subcohort of anti-type 1 interferon (IFN-1)-positive patients., Results: Our analysis revealed that elderly patients with COVID-19 with critical disease manifested lower SARS-CoV-2 T-cell clonotype diversity as well as T-cell responses with reduced magnitude, whereas the SARS-CoV-2-specific clonotypes targeted a broad range of HLA class I- and class II-restricted epitopes across the viral proteome. The presence of anti-IFN-I antibodies was associated with certain HLA alleles. Finally, COVID-19 mRNA immunization induced an increase in the breadth of SARS-CoV-2-specific clonotypes in patients with IEIs, including those who had failed to seroconvert., Conclusions: Elderly individuals have impaired capacity to develop broad and sustained T-cell responses after SARS-CoV-2 infection. Genetic factors may play a role in the production of anti-IFN-1 antibodies. COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are effective in inducing T-cell responses in patients with IEIs., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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36. Anti-Interleukin-23 Autoantibodies in Adult-Onset Immunodeficiency.
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Cheng A, Kashyap A, Salvator H, Rosen LB, Colby D, Ardeshir-Larijani F, Loehrer PJ, Ding L, Lugo Reyes SO, Riminton S, Ballman M, Rocco JM, Marciano BE, Freeman AF, Browne SK, Hsu AP, Zelazny A, Rajan A, Sereti I, Zerbe CS, Lionakis MS, and Holland SM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Interleukin-12 antagonists & inhibitors, Interleukin-12 immunology, Mycoses immunology, Thymoma immunology, Thymus Neoplasms immunology, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Bacterial Infections immunology, Autoantibodies immunology, Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes immunology, Interleukin-23 antagonists & inhibitors, Interleukin-23 immunology, Opportunistic Infections immunology
- Abstract
Background: Autoantibodies against interleukin-12 (anti-interleukin-12) are often identified in patients with thymoma, but opportunistic infections develop in only some of these patients. Interleukin-12 (with subunits p40 and p35) shares a common subunit with interleukin-23 (subunits p40 and p19). In a patient with disseminated Burkholderia gladioli infection, the identification of both anti-interleukin-23 and anti-interleukin-12 prompted further investigation., Methods: Among the patients (most of whom had thymoma) who were known to have anti-interleukin-12, we screened for autoantibodies against interleukin-23 (anti-interleukin-23). To validate the potential role of anti-interleukin-23 with respect to opportunistic infection, we tested a second cohort of patients with thymoma as well as patients without either thymoma or known anti-interleukin-12 who had unusual infections., Results: Among 30 patients with anti-interleukin-12 who had severe mycobacterial, bacterial, or fungal infections, 15 (50%) also had autoantibodies that neutralized interleukin-23. The potency of such neutralization was correlated with the severity of these infections. The neutralizing activity of anti-interleukin-12 alone was not associated with infection. In the validation cohort of 91 patients with thymoma, the presence of anti-interleukin-23 was associated with infection status in 74 patients (81%). Overall, neutralizing anti-interleukin-23 was detected in 30 of 116 patients (26%) with thymoma and in 30 of 36 patients (83%) with disseminated, cerebral, or pulmonary infections. Anti-interleukin-23 was present in 6 of 32 patients (19%) with severe intracellular infections and in 2 of 16 patients (12%) with unusual intracranial infections, including Cladophialophora bantiana and Mycobacterium avium complex., Conclusions: Among patients with a variety of mycobacterial, bacterial, or fungal infections, the presence of neutralizing anti-interleukin-23 was associated with severe, persistent opportunistic infections. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and others.)., (Copyright © 2024 Massachusetts Medical Society.)
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- 2024
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37. Resolving persistent air leaks associated with autosomal dominant hyper-IgE syndrome using one-way endobronchial valves: report of cases.
- Author
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Kucera J, Buhaya M, Sartain NN, Olivier KN, Freeman AF, and Hoang CD
- Abstract
Background: Autosomal dominant hyper-IgE syndrome (AD-HIES) is a rare genetic syndrome that alters typical post-operative wound healing. AD-HIES patients are prone to develop persistent air leaks (PALs) due to bronchopleural fistulas. This report is unique in that it describes a novel approach to managing PALs in this complex population., Case Description: Two patients with AD-HIES were identified in the setting of a PAL. The first patient was a 31-year-old male with recurrent pneumonia, who developed a large hydropneumothorax following re-presentation with fever and cough. A chest tube was inserted, which required continuous suction in the setting of what developed into a PAL. Subsequently, an endobronchial valve (EBV) was deployed to successfully manage the PAL. The second patient was a 25-year-old male, who developed a post-operative large volume air leak following a complicated surgical resection of a giant pneumatocele. Several attempts of placing multiple EBVs were required to finally address the PAL. In both cases, EBVs were successfully employed to manage and eventually resolve symptoms caused by PAL., Conclusions: Our experience suggests that EBVs are successful in treating PAL in the setting of AD-HIES, which often manifests as highly complex scenarios. Hence, EBVs represent a valuable addition to the therapeutic armamentarium against recalcitrant PAL. EBVs were well-tolerated in patients afflicted by AD-HIES, with no progressive infections noted. Both patients ultimately were able to resolve their PAL following placement of the EBV., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://acr.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/acr-23-35/coif). K.N.O was funded in part by the intramural research program of NHLBI, NIH (No. ZIA HL 006201) and through the NHLBI intramural/extramural (grant No. U01 HL 156655). C.D.H. was funded in part by the intramural research program of NCI, NIH (No. ZIA BC 011657). The other authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (2024 AME Case Reports. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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38. GenIA, the Genetic Immunology Advisor database for inborn errors of immunity.
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Caballero-Oteyza A, Crisponi L, Peng XP, Yauy K, Volpi S, Giardino S, Freeman AF, Grimbacher B, and Proietti M
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- Humans, Databases, Genetic, Software
- Abstract
Background: To date, no publicly accessible platform has captured and synthesized all of the layered dimensions of genotypic, phenotypic, and mechanistic information published in the field of inborn errors of immunity (IEIs). Such a platform would represent the extensive and complex landscape of IEIs and could increase the rate of diagnosis in patients with a suspected IEI, which remains unacceptably low., Objective: Our aim was to create an expertly curated, patient-centered, multidimensional IEI database that enables aggregation and sophisticated data interrogation and promotes involvement from diverse stakeholders across the community., Methods: The database structure was designed following a subject-centered model and written in Structured Query Language (SQL). The web application is written in Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP), Hypertext Markup Language (HTML), Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and JavaScript. All data stored in the Genetic Immunology Advisor (GenIA) are extracted by manually reviewing published research articles., Results: We completed data collection and curation for 24 pilot genes. Using these data, we have exemplified how GenIA can provide quick access to structured, longitudinal, more thorough, comprehensive, and up-to-date IEI knowledge than do currently existing databases, such as ClinGen, Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO), ClinVar, or Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM), with which GenIA intends to dovetail., Conclusions: GenIA strives to accurately capture the extensive genetic, mechanistic, and phenotypic heterogeneity found across IEIs, as well as genetic paradigms and diagnostic pitfalls associated with individual genes and conditions. The IEI community's involvement will help promote GenIA as an enduring resource that supports and improves knowledge sharing, research, diagnosis, and care for patients with genetic immune disease., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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39. Chronic Liver Disease in Patients with Prolidase Deficiency: A Case Series.
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Gopalakrishna H, Asif B, Rai A, Conjeevaram HS, Mironova M, Kleiner DE, Freeman AF, and Heller T
- Abstract
Introduction: Prolidase deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder caused by variants in the PEPD gene. Patients usually have multi-organ involvement and a wide range of clinical features including recurrent skin ulcers, dysmorphic facial features, recurrent infections, intellectual disability, and splenomegaly. Studies have shown that patients with prolidase deficiency may have hepatic manifestations including hepatomegaly and abnormal liver enzymes. However, there is no detailed description of liver disease in this patient population., Case Presentation: Here, we present 3 patients with prolidase deficiency with varying extents of hepatic involvement., Conclusion: Prolidase deficiency patients with liver disease should be followed up long term to understand more about the pathophysiology and the impact of liver disease on long-term outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflict of interest to declare., (© 2024 The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2024
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40. Genetic Risk Factors for Early-Onset Merkel Cell Carcinoma.
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Mohsin N, Hunt D, Yan J, Jabbour AJ, Nghiem P, Choi J, Zhang Y, Freeman AF, Bergerson JRE, Dell'Orso S, Lachance K, Kulikauskas R, Collado L, Cao W, Lack J, Similuk M, Seifert BA, Ghosh R, Walkiewicz MA, and Brownell I
- Subjects
- Humans, Middle Aged, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Germ-Line Mutation, Risk Factors, Carcinoma, Merkel Cell epidemiology, Carcinoma, Merkel Cell genetics, Skin Neoplasms epidemiology, Skin Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Importance: Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare, aggressive neuroendocrine skin cancer. Of the patients who develop MCC annually, only 4% are younger than 50 years., Objective: To identify genetic risk factors for early-onset MCC via genomic sequencing., Design, Setting, and Participants: The study represents a multicenter collaboration between the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), and the University of Washington. Participants with early-onset and later-onset MCC were prospectively enrolled in an institutional review board-approved study at the University of Washington between January 2003 and May 2019. Unrelated controls were enrolled in the NIAID Centralized Sequencing Program (CSP) between September 2017 and September 2021. Analysis was performed from September 2021 and March 2023. Early-onset MCC was defined as disease occurrence in individuals younger than 50 years. Later-onset MCC was defined as disease occurrence at age 50 years or older. Unrelated controls were evaluated by the NIAID CSP for reasons other than familial cancer syndromes, including immunological, neurological, and psychiatric disorders., Results: This case-control analysis included 1012 participants: 37 with early-onset MCC, 45 with later-onset MCC, and 930 unrelated controls. Among 37 patients with early-onset MCC, 7 (19%) had well-described variants in genes associated with cancer predisposition. Six patients had variants associated with hereditary cancer syndromes (ATM = 2, BRCA1 = 2, BRCA2 = 1, and TP53 = 1) and 1 patient had a variant associated with immunodeficiency and lymphoma (MAGT1). Compared with 930 unrelated controls, the early-onset MCC cohort was significantly enriched for cancer-predisposing pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in these 5 genes (odds ratio, 30.35; 95% CI, 8.89-106.30; P < .001). No germline disease variants in these genes were identified in 45 patients with later-onset MCC. Additional variants in DNA repair genes were also identified among patients with MCC., Conclusions and Relevance: Because variants in certain DNA repair and cancer predisposition genes are associated with early-onset MCC, genetic counseling and testing should be considered for patients presenting at younger than 50 years.
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- 2024
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41. Early intervention in STAT3 dominant negative disease.
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An ZA, Williams KW, Urban A, Ali S, Roy S, Lafeer C, Heimall J, Dimitriades VR, Davis J, Kong HH, Cowen EW, Holland SM, and Freeman AF
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- 2023
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42. Expanded microbiome niches of RAG-deficient patients.
- Author
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Blaustein RA, Shen Z, Kashaf SS, Lee-Lin S, Conlan S, Bosticardo M, Delmonte OM, Holmes CJ, Taylor ME, Banania G, Nagao K, Dimitrova D, Kanakry JA, Su H, Holland SM, Bergerson JRE, Freeman AF, Notarangelo LD, Kong HH, and Segre JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Skin, Metagenome, Microbiota genetics, Gastrointestinal Microbiome genetics
- Abstract
The complex interplay between microbiota and immunity is important to human health. To explore how altered adaptive immunity influences the microbiome, we characterize skin, nares, and gut microbiota of patients with recombination-activating gene (RAG) deficiency-a rare genetically defined inborn error of immunity (IEI) that results in a broad spectrum of clinical phenotypes. Integrating de novo assembly of metagenomes from RAG-deficient patients with reference genome catalogs provides an expansive multi-kingdom view of microbial diversity. RAG-deficient patient microbiomes exhibit inter-individual variation, including expansion of opportunistic pathogens (e.g., Corynebacterium bovis, Haemophilus influenzae), and a relative loss of body site specificity. We identify 35 and 27 bacterial species derived from skin/nares and gut microbiomes, respectively, which are distinct to RAG-deficient patients compared to healthy individuals. Underscoring IEI patients as potential reservoirs for viral persistence and evolution, we further characterize the colonization of eukaryotic RNA viruses (e.g., Coronavirus 229E, Norovirus GII) in this patient population., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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43. Characterization of the antispike IgG immune response to COVID-19 vaccines in people with a wide variety of immunodeficiencies.
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Zendt M, Bustos Carrillo FA, Kelly S, Saturday T, DeGrange M, Ginigeme A, Wu L, Callier V, Ortega-Villa A, Faust M, Chang-Rabley E, Bugal K, Kenney H, Khil P, Youn JH, Osei G, Regmi P, Anderson V, Bosticardo M, Daub J, DiMaggio T, Kreuzburg S, Pala F, Pfister J, Treat J, Ulrick J, Karkanitsa M, Kalish H, Kuhns DB, Priel DL, Fink DL, Tsang JS, Sparks R, Uzel G, Waldman MA, Zerbe CS, Delmonte OM, Bergerson JRE, Das S, Freeman AF, Lionakis MS, Sadtler K, van Doremalen N, Munster V, Notarangelo LD, Holland SM, and Ricotta EE
- Subjects
- Humans, COVID-19 Vaccines, Prospective Studies, Immunity, Immunoglobulin G, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Research on coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination in immune-deficient/disordered people (IDP) has focused on cancer and organ transplantation populations. In a prospective cohort of 195 IDP and 35 healthy volunteers (HV), antispike immunoglobulin G (IgG) was detected in 88% of IDP after dose 2, increasing to 93% by 6 months after dose 3. Despite high seroconversion, median IgG levels for IDP never surpassed one-third that of HV. IgG binding to Omicron BA.1 was lowest among variants. Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 pseudo-neutralization only modestly correlated with antispike IgG concentration. IgG levels were not significantly altered by receipt of different messenger RNA-based vaccines, immunomodulating treatments, and prior severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infections. While our data show that three doses of coronavirus disease 2019 vaccinations induce antispike IgG in most IDP, additional doses are needed to increase protection. Because of the notably reduced IgG response to Omicron BA.1, the efficacy of additional vaccinations, including bivalent vaccines, should be studied in this population.
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- 2023
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44. Inborn Errors of Immunity: A Role for Functional Testing and Flow Cytometry in Aiding Clinical Diagnosis.
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Ma CS, Freeman AF, and Fleisher TA
- Subjects
- Humans, Flow Cytometry, Autoimmunity, Genetic Testing
- Abstract
With the exponential discovery of new inborn errors of immunity (IEI), it is becoming increasingly difficult to differentiate between a number of the more recently defined disorders. This is compounded by the fact that although IEI primarily present with immunodeficiency, the spectrum of disease is broad and often extends to features typical of autoimmunity, autoinflammation, atopic disease, and/or malignancy. Here we use case studies to discuss the laboratory and genetic tests used that ultimately led to the specific diagnoses., (Copyright © 2023 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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45. Disseminated mycobacterial infections after tumor necrosis factor inhibitor use, revealing inborn errors of immunity.
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Squire JD, Libertin CR, Powers H, Nelson J, Brumble L, Laham FR, Agharahimi A, Freeman AF, and Leiding JW
- Subjects
- Humans, Nontuberculous Mycobacteria, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha, Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitors, Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous diagnosis, Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous drug therapy
- Abstract
Tumor necrosis factor-a inhibitors can be associated with increased risk of infections, particularly reactivation of latent tuberculosis or nontuberculous mycobacterium (NTM). However, because disseminated NTM is rare, inborn errors of immunity should be considered. We present three patients with disseminated NTM after tumor necrosis factor-a inhibitor use who were found to have inborn errors of immunity., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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46. Successful Use of Fosmanogepix for Treatment of Rare Highly Resistant Cutaneous Fusariosis in a Pediatric Patient With STAT3 Hyper-Immunoglobulin E Syndrome and End-Stage Kidney Disease.
- Author
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Goggin KP, Londeree J, Freeman AF, Garro R, and George RP
- Abstract
We describe the successful use of the novel antifungal drug fosmanogepix to treat a chronic case of multidrug-resistant cutaneous Fusarium suttonianum infection in a pediatric patient with STAT3 hyper-IgE syndrome and end-stage kidney disease on peritoneal dialysis., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: No reported conflicts of interest., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.)
- Published
- 2023
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47. Chromosomal microarray analysis supplements exome sequencing to diagnose children with suspected inborn errors of immunity.
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Beers BJ, Similuk MN, Ghosh R, Seifert BA, Jamal L, Kamen M, Setzer MR, Jodarski C, Duncan R, Hunt D, Mixer M, Cao W, Bi W, Veltri D, Karlins E, Zhang L, Li Z, Oler AJ, Jevtich K, Yu Y, Hullfish H, Bielekova B, Frischmeyer-Guerrerio P, Dang Do A, Huryn LA, Olivier KN, Su HC, Lyons JJ, Zerbe CS, Rao VK, Keller MD, Freeman AF, Holland SM, Franco LM, Walkiewicz MA, and Yan J
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Exome Sequencing, Microarray Analysis, Phenotype, Chromosomes, Genetic Testing
- Abstract
Purpose: Though copy number variants (CNVs) have been suggested to play a significant role in inborn errors of immunity (IEI), the precise nature of this role remains largely unexplored. We sought to determine the diagnostic contribution of CNVs using genome-wide chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) in children with IEI., Methods: We performed exome sequencing (ES) and CMA for 332 unrelated pediatric probands referred for evaluation of IEI. The analysis included primary, secondary, and incidental findings., Results: Of the 332 probands, 134 (40.4%) received molecular diagnoses. Of these, 116/134 (86.6%) were diagnosed by ES alone. An additional 15/134 (11.2%) were diagnosed by CMA alone, including two likely de novo changes. Three (2.2%) participants had diagnostic molecular findings from both ES and CMA, including two compound heterozygotes and one participant with two distinct diagnoses. Half of the participants with CMA contribution to diagnosis had CNVs in at least one non-immune gene, highlighting the clinical complexity of these cases. Overall, CMA contributed to 18/134 diagnoses (13.4%), increasing the overall diagnostic yield by 15.5% beyond ES alone., Conclusion: Pairing ES and CMA can provide a comprehensive evaluation to clarify the complex factors that contribute to both immune and non-immune phenotypes. Such a combined approach to genetic testing helps untangle complex phenotypes, not only by clarifying the differential diagnosis, but in some cases by identifying multiple diagnoses contributing to the overall clinical presentation., Competing Interests: WB is an employee of Baylor Genetics. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The reviewer IC declared a shared affiliation, with no collaboration, with one of the authors, WB, to the handling editor at the time of the review., (Copyright © 2023 Beers, Similuk, Ghosh, Seifert, Jamal, Kamen, Setzer, Jodarski, Duncan, Hunt, Mixer, Cao, Bi, Veltri, Karlins, Zhang, Li, Oler, Jevtich, Yu, Hullfish, Bielekova, Frischmeyer-Guerrerio, Dang Do, Huryn, Olivier, Su, Lyons, Zerbe, Rao, Keller, Freeman, Holland, Franco, Walkiewicz and Yan.)
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- 2023
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48. Reappraisal of Idiopathic CD4 Lymphocytopenia at 30 Years.
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Lisco A, Ortega-Villa AM, Mystakelis H, Anderson MV, Mateja A, Laidlaw E, Manion M, Roby G, Higgins J, Kuriakose S, Walkiewicz MA, Similuk M, Leiding JW, Freeman AF, Sheikh V, and Sereti I
- Subjects
- Humans, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, COVID-19 complications, Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes complications, Lymphopenia etiology, Opportunistic Infections, Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases complications
- Abstract
Background: Idiopathic CD4 lymphocytopenia (ICL) is a clinical syndrome that is defined by CD4 lymphopenia of less than 300 cells per cubic millimeter in the absence of any primary or acquired cause of immunodeficiency. Some 30 years after its original identification, ICL has remained a disease of obscure cause, with limited evidence with respect to its prognosis or management, despite diagnostic and therapeutic innovations., Methods: We evaluated the clinical, genetic, immunologic, and prognostic characteristics of 108 patients who were enrolled during an 11-year period. We performed whole-exome and targeted gene sequencing to identify genetic causes of lymphopenia. We also performed longitudinal linear mixed-model analyses of T-cell count trajectories and evaluated predictors of clinical events, the response to immunization against coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19), and mortality., Results: After the exclusion of patients with genetic and acquired causes of CD4 lymphopenia, the study population included 91 patients with ICL during 374 person-years of follow-up. The median CD4+ T-cell count among the patients was 80 cells per cubic millimeter. The most prevalent opportunistic infections were diseases related to human papillomavirus (in 29%), cryptococcosis (in 24%), molluscum contagiosum (in 9%), and nontuberculous mycobacterial diseases (in 5%). A reduced CD4 count (<100 cells per cubic millimeter), as compared with a CD4 count of 101 to 300 cells, was associated with a higher risk of opportunistic infection (odds ratio, 5.3; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.8 to 10.7) and invasive cancer (odds ratio, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.1 to 4.3) and a lower risk of autoimmunity (odds ratio, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.2 to 0.9). The risk of death was similar to that in the age- and sex-adjusted general population, but the prevalence of cancer was higher., Conclusions: Among the study patients, ICL continued to be associated with increased susceptibility to viral, encapsulated fungal, and mycobacterial diseases, as well as with a reduced response to novel antigens and an increased risk of cancer. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Cancer Institute; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00867269.)., (Copyright © 2023 Massachusetts Medical Society.)
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- 2023
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49. Primary Invasive Cutaneous Fusariosis in Patients with STAT3 Hyper-IgE Syndrome.
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Abbara S, Freeman AF, Cohen JF, Leclerc-Mercier S, Sanchez L, Schlatter J, Cisternino S, Parker R, Cowen EW, Rouzaud C, Bougnoux ME, Lanternier F, Lionakis MS, and Lortholary O
- Subjects
- Humans, STAT3 Transcription Factor genetics, Skin microbiology, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Fusariosis drug therapy, Fusariosis microbiology, Job Syndrome genetics
- Abstract
Dominant negative (DN) mutations in signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) are known to cause hyper-IgE syndrome, a rare primary immunodeficiency. STAT3 DN patients are prone to develop fungal infections, including chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis due to impaired IL-17-mediated immunity, and pulmonary aspergillosis. Despite having preserved phagocyte functions, STAT3 DN patients present connective tissue abnormalities and a defect in the immunological skin barrier. Fusarium species are ubiquitous molds, whose potential to infect humans depends on the host's innate and cellular immune status. Our aim was to describe four STAT3 DN patients with fusariosis confined to the skin. Medical records were reviewed and summarized. Four patients, aged 4, 11, 30, and 33 years, presented with chronic skin lesions which started in the extremities. Two patients had remote lesions, and none had systemic involvement. Skin biopsies showed mycelial threads with deep inflammatory-occasionally granulomatous-infiltrates, reaching the dermis; cultures grew Fusarium solani. Response to treatment was heterogeneous, often requiring multimodal therapies, including topical antifungal preparations. In this work, we describe primary invasive cutaneous fusariosis as a syndromic entity in four STAT3 DN patients., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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50. A multifaceted disease: The stats of STAT3 GOF.
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Freeman AF and Bergerson JRE
- Subjects
- Humans, Mutation, STAT1 Transcription Factor genetics, Gain of Function Mutation, STAT3 Transcription Factor genetics, STAT3 Transcription Factor metabolism
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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