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Monogenic Primary Immunodeficiency Disorder Associated with Common Variable Immunodeficiency and Autoimmunity

Authors :
Marziyeh Tavakol
Soheila Alyasin
Gholamreza Hassanpour
Afshin Shirkani
Arezou Rezaei
Mansoureh Shariat
Mohammad Hassan Bemanian
Asghar Aghamohammadi
Anahita Razaghian
Mahsa Sohani
Samin Sharafian
Behzad Darabi
Salar Pashangzadeh
Setareh Mamishi
Mitra Tafakoridelbari
Javad Tafaroji
Fateme Babaha
Sepideh Darougar
Akefeh Ahmadiafshar
Hamid Ahanchian
Hossein Esmaeilzadeh
Parisa Ashournia
Reza Yazdani
Mojgan Moghtaderi
Abbas Khalili
Babak Ghalebaghi
Rasoul Nasiri Kalmarzi
Morteza Fallahpour
Seyed Erfan Rasouli
Mohammad Hossein Asgardoon
Saba Arshi
Roya Sherkat
Hassan Abolhassani
Hossein Ali Khazaei
Sarehsadat Ebrahimi
Tooba Momen
Arash Kalantari
Mohammad Hossein Eslamian
Maryam Khoshkhui
Mehrnaz Mesdaghi
Mahnaz Sadeghi-Shabestari
Babak Negahdari
Nima Rezaei
Javad Mohammadi
Seyed Alireza Mahdaviani
Fereshte Salami
Javad Ghaffari
Azam Mohsenzadeh
Farahzad Jabbari-Azad
Ashraf Samavat
Zahra Chavoshzadeh
Paniz Shirmast
Behzad Shakerian
Samaneh Delavari
Alireza Shafiei
Ahmad Vosughimotlagh
Nasrin Behniafard
Mahnaz Jamee
Marzieh Heidarzadeh
Maziyar Rahimi Haji-Abadi
Taher Cheraghi
Rasol Molatefi
Abbas Dabbaghzadeh
Mohammad Nabavi
Gholamreza Azizi
Seyed Mohammad Fathi
Source :
International archives of allergy and immunology. 181(9)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is the most frequent primary immunodeficiency disorder mainly characterized by recurrent bacterial infections besides other immunological defects including loss of or dysfunction of B cells and decreased immunoglobulin levels. In this study, our aim is to evaluate clinical, immunological, and molecular data of patients with a primary clinical diagnosis of CVID and autoimmune phenotype with a confirmed genetic diagnosis. Methods: Among 297 patients with CVID, who were registered in the Iranian Primary Immunodeficiency Registry at Children’s Medical Center Hospital in Iran, 83 patients have been genetically examined and 27 patients with autoimmunity and confirmed genetic mutations were selected for analysis. Whole-exome sequencing and confirmatory Sanger sequencing methods were used for the study population. A questionnaire was retrospectively filled for all patients to evaluate demographic, laboratory, clinical, and genetic data. Results: In the 27 studied patients, 11 different genetic defects were identified, and the most common mutated gene was LRBA, reported in 17 (63.0%) patients. Two patients (7.7%) showed autoimmune complications as the first presentation of immunodeficiency. Eleven patients (40.7%) developed one type of autoimmunity, and 16 patients (59.3%) progressed to poly-autoimmunity. Most of the patients with mono-autoimmunity (n = 9, 90.0%) primarily developed infectious complications, while in patients with poly-autoimmunity, the most common first presentation was enteropathy (n = 6, 37.6%). In 13 patients (61.9%), the diagnosis of autoimmune disorders preceded the diagnosis of primary immunodeficiency. The most frequent autoimmune manifestations were hematologic (40.7%), gastrointestinal (48.1%), rheumatologic (25.9%), and dermatologic (22.2%) disorders. Patients with poly-autoimmunity had lower regulatory T cells than patients with mono-autoimmunity. Conclusion: In our cohort, the diagnosis of autoimmune disorders preceded the diagnosis of primary immunodeficiency in most patients. This association highlights the fact that patients referring with autoimmune manifestations should be evaluated for humoral immunity.

Details

ISSN :
14230097
Volume :
181
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International archives of allergy and immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2bbcffee0b48795999056c5b61fb0a4c