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A survey of 90 patients with autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome related to TNFRSF6 mutation

Authors :
Marie-Claude Stolzenberg
Benoit Florkin
Felipe Suarez
Delphine Gobert
Frédéric Rieux-Laucat
Olivier Hermine
Christophe Chantrain
Olivier Lambotte
Capucine Picard
Nathalie Aladjidi
Brigitte Bader-Meunier
Bénédicte Neven
Yves Bertrand
Gérard Michel
Lien De Somer
Alain Fischer
Stéphane Blanche
Guy Leverger
Aude Magerus-Chatinet
Nina Lanzarotti
Eric Jeziorski
Eric Oksenhendler
Source :
Blood. 118(18)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) is a genetic disorder characterized by early-onset, chronic, nonmalignant lymphoproliferation, autoimmune manifestations, and susceptibility to lymphoma. The majority of ALPS patients carry heterozygous germline (ALPS-FAS) or somatic mutations (ALPS-sFAS) of the TNFRSF6 gene coding for FAS. Although the clinical features of ALPS have been described previously, long-term follow-up data on morbidity and mortality are scarce. We performed a retrospective analysis of clinical and genetic features of 90 ALPS-FAS and ALPS-sFAS patients monitored over a median period of 20.5 years. Heterozygous germline mutations of TNFRSF6 were identified in 83% of probands. Somatic TNFRSF6 mutations were found in 17% of index cases (all located within the intracellular domain of FAS). Sixty percent of the ALPS-FAS patients with mutations in the extracellular domain had a somatic mutation affecting the second allele of TNFRSF6; age at onset was later in these patients. No other genotype-phenotype correlations could be found. Long-term analysis confirmed a trend toward spontaneous remission of lymphoproliferation in adulthood but mixed outcomes for autoimmune manifestations. We observed significant and potentially life-threatening disease and treatment-related morbidity, including a high risk of sepsis after splenectomy that calls for careful long-term monitoring of ALPS patients. We also noted a significantly greater occurrence of disease-related symptoms in male than in female patients.

Details

ISSN :
15280020
Volume :
118
Issue :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a1b223821e217ac654584fe52139304