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Characterization of the clinical and immunologic phenotype and management of 157 individuals with 56 distinct heterozygous NFKB1 mutations

Authors :
Lorenzini, T.
Fliegauf, M.
Klammer, N.
Frede, N.
Proietti, M.
Bulashevska, A.
Camacho-Ordonez, N.
Varjosalo, M.
Kinnunen, M.
Vries, E de
Meer, J.W.M. van der
Ameratunga, R.
Roifman, C.M.
Schejter, Y.D.
Kobbe, R.
Hautala, T.
Atschekzei, F.
Schmidt, R.E.
Schröder, C.
Stepensky, P.
Shadur, B.
Pedroza, L.A.
Flier, M. van der
Martínez-Gallo, M.
Gonzalez-Granado, L.I.
Allende, L.M.
Shcherbina, A.
Kuzmenko, N.
Zakharova, V.
Neves, J.F.
Svec, P.
Fischer, U.
Ip, W.
Bartsch, O.
Barış, S.
Klein, C.
Geha, R.
Chou, J.
Alosaimi, M.
Weintraub, L.
Boztug, K.
Hirschmugl, T.
Vilela, M.M. Dos Santos
Holzinger, D.
Seidl, M.
Lougaris, V.
Plebani, A.
Alsina, L.
Piquer-Gibert, M.
Deyà-Martínez, A.
Slade, C.A.
Aghamohammadi, A.
Abolhassani, H.
Hammarström, L.
Kuismin, O.
Helminen, M.
Allen, H.L.
Thaventhiran, J.E.
Freeman, A.F.
Cook, M.
Bakhtiar, S.
Christiansen, M.
Cunningham-Rundles, C.
Patel, N.C.
Rae, W.
Niehues, T.
Brauer, N.
Syrjänen, J.
Seppänen, M.R.J.
Burns, S.O.
Tuijnenburg, P.
Kuijpers, T.W.
Warnatz, K.
Grimbacher, B.
Lorenzini, T.
Fliegauf, M.
Klammer, N.
Frede, N.
Proietti, M.
Bulashevska, A.
Camacho-Ordonez, N.
Varjosalo, M.
Kinnunen, M.
Vries, E de
Meer, J.W.M. van der
Ameratunga, R.
Roifman, C.M.
Schejter, Y.D.
Kobbe, R.
Hautala, T.
Atschekzei, F.
Schmidt, R.E.
Schröder, C.
Stepensky, P.
Shadur, B.
Pedroza, L.A.
Flier, M. van der
Martínez-Gallo, M.
Gonzalez-Granado, L.I.
Allende, L.M.
Shcherbina, A.
Kuzmenko, N.
Zakharova, V.
Neves, J.F.
Svec, P.
Fischer, U.
Ip, W.
Bartsch, O.
Barış, S.
Klein, C.
Geha, R.
Chou, J.
Alosaimi, M.
Weintraub, L.
Boztug, K.
Hirschmugl, T.
Vilela, M.M. Dos Santos
Holzinger, D.
Seidl, M.
Lougaris, V.
Plebani, A.
Alsina, L.
Piquer-Gibert, M.
Deyà-Martínez, A.
Slade, C.A.
Aghamohammadi, A.
Abolhassani, H.
Hammarström, L.
Kuismin, O.
Helminen, M.
Allen, H.L.
Thaventhiran, J.E.
Freeman, A.F.
Cook, M.
Bakhtiar, S.
Christiansen, M.
Cunningham-Rundles, C.
Patel, N.C.
Rae, W.
Niehues, T.
Brauer, N.
Syrjänen, J.
Seppänen, M.R.J.
Burns, S.O.
Tuijnenburg, P.
Kuijpers, T.W.
Warnatz, K.
Grimbacher, B.
Source :
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology; 901; 911; 0091-6749; 4; 146; ~Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology~901~911~~~0091-6749~4~146~~
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext<br />BACKGROUND: An increasing number of NFKB1 variants are being identified in patients with heterogeneous immunologic phenotypes. OBJECTIVE: To characterize the clinical and cellular phenotype as well as the management of patients with heterozygous NFKB1 mutations. METHODS: In a worldwide collaborative effort, we evaluated 231 individuals harboring 105 distinct heterozygous NFKB1 variants. To provide evidence for pathogenicity, each variant was assessed in silico; in addition, 32 variants were assessed by functional in vitro testing of nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B cells (NF-κB) signaling. RESULTS: We classified 56 of the 105 distinct NFKB1 variants in 157 individuals from 68 unrelated families as pathogenic. Incomplete clinical penetrance (70%) and age-dependent severity of NFKB1-related phenotypes were observed. The phenotype included hypogammaglobulinemia (88.9%), reduced switched memory B cells (60.3%), and respiratory (83%) and gastrointestinal (28.6%) infections, thus characterizing the disorder as primary immunodeficiency. However, the high frequency of autoimmunity (57.4%), lymphoproliferation (52.4%), noninfectious enteropathy (23.1%), opportunistic infections (15.7%), autoinflammation (29.6%), and malignancy (16.8%) identified NF-κB1-related disease as an inborn error of immunity with immune dysregulation, rather than a mere primary immunodeficiency. Current treatment includes immunoglobulin replacement and immunosuppressive agents. CONCLUSIONS: We present a comprehensive clinical overview of the NF-κB1-related phenotype, which includes immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, autoinflammation, and cancer. Because of its multisystem involvement, clinicians from each and every medical discipline need to be made aware of this autosomal-dominant disease. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and NF-κB1 pathway-targeted therapeutic strategies should be considered in the future.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology; 901; 911; 0091-6749; 4; 146; ~Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology~901~911~~~0091-6749~4~146~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284065658
Document Type :
Electronic Resource