Chapter 16
Isotype Defects Mirjam van der Burg1, Corry M.R. Weemaes2, and Charlotte Cunningham-Rundles3 1
Department of Immunology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 2Department of Pediatric Infectious
Disease and Immunology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, The Netherlands, 3Department of Medicine
Allergy & Immunology,
Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA
Chapter Outline Immunoglobulin Structure and Function IgM IgG IgA and Secretory IgA IgE Isotype Defects Ig Heavy Chain Deletions Definition Genetics Clinical Presentation Igκ and Igλ Light Chain Deficiency Definition Genetics Pathogenesis Clinical Presentation Diagnostics IgG Subclass Deficiency Definition Genetics Pathogenesis Clinical Presentation
389 390 391 392 392 392 393 393 393 393 393 393 393 393 394 394 395 395 395 395 395
IMMUNOGLOBULIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION Antibodies are the antigen-specific proteins produced by B lymphocytes and synthesized and secreted by plasma cells, which arise from terminally differentiated B cells.1 Antibodies or Ig molecules are Y-shaped, and consist of two pairs of identical heavy and light chains. The antigenbinding or variable (V) regions vary extensively among antibodies of different specificity, and are generated through assembly of the variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J) gene segments in a process called V(D)J recombination (Figure 16.1A). The variable part is involved in antigen
Diagnostics Management Prognosis Selective IgA Deficiency Definition Genetics Pathogenesis Clinical Presentation Diagnostics Management Prognosis Selective IgM Deficiency Definition Genetics Pathogenesis Clinical Presentation Diagnostics Management Prognosis References
396 397 397 397 397 397 398 398 401 401 402 402 402 402 402 402 403 403 403 403
binding. The remainder of the antibody molecule is its constant (C) region and exerts the effector functions. A total of 18 different isotypes or classes and subclasses of Igs are present in plasma or expressed on the surface of B lymphocytes. They are composed of five classes of heavy-chain isotypes (μ, δ, γ, α, and ε chains), which include four subclasses of γ chain (γ1, γ2, γ3, and γ4) and two classes of α chain (α1 and α2) that pair with two types of light chains (κ and λ). The gene structure of the constant regions of the Ig heavy chain gene is given in Figure 16.1B. Antibodies are a critical component of host defenses. By themselves, antibodies are often able to neutralize toxins and viruses or prevent colonization by pathogenic organisms. In addition,
K.E. Sullivan and E.R. Stiehm (Eds): Stiehm’s Immune Deficiencies. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-405546-9.00016-9 © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
389
390
PART | 2
(A)
DH
VH 1
2
3
4
5
6
70
1
2 3
Primary Immune Deficiencies
JH
4
5 27
Cμ
1 2 3 4 5 6 sμ
DH → JH rearrangement
IgH V D J C C
VH → DHJH rearrangement V J C IgL transcription
C
Cµ
VDJ
C
IGH mRNA
translation α β
(B) V DJ
Cμ
Cδ
Cγ3
Sμ V DJ
Sγ3 Cα1
Sγ1
Sγ2
Ψγ
Cα1
Cγ2
Sα1
Cγ2
Ψγ
SμSα1
Ψε
Cγ1
Cγ4 Sγ4
Sγ2
Cε Sε
Cγ4 Sγ4
Cε Sε
Cα2 Sα2
Cα2 Sα2
FIGURE 16.1 (A) Schematic representation of the Ig heavy chain locus with V(D)J recombination resulting in the formation of a V(D)J exon which is spliced at the RNA level to the exons coding the constant region. After translation a heavy chain is formed. Two identical heavy chains and two identical light chains form an Ig molecule. (B) Schematic representation of a rearranged IGH locus with the different constant regions, which are preceded by switch regions (open circles). During class-switch recombination, the constant region can be permanently replaced via recombination of two switch regions. Isotype switching from IgM/IgD to IgA1 is displayed.
TABLE 16.1 Effector Functions of Different Ig Isotypes Functional Activity
IgM
IgG1
IgG2
IgG3
IgG4
IgA
IgE
Neutralization
1
11
11
11
11
11
2
Opsonization
1
111
2
11
1
1
2
Sensitization for killing by NK cells
2
11
2
11
2
2
2
Sensitization of mast cells
2
1
2
1
2
2
111
111
11
1
111
2
1
2
Activation of complement system Table adapted from Murphy (2012).
2
bacteria and fungi opsonized with antibodies can bind to phagocytic cells expressing immunoglobulin receptors to activate their ingestion and subsequent destruction. Antibodies are also able to activate the complement cascade, which enhances opsonization and may directly lyse Grampositive and -negative bacteria (see Table 16.1).2
IgM IgM antibodies are the first antibodies produced during an immune response. For most immune responses, the IgM response wanes as IgG or other isotypes are produced. However, persistent IgM production may be seen for
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
391
polysaccharides (isohemagglutinins) or lipopolysaccharides (anti-endotoxins), and with certain autoantibodies (cold agglutinins and the rheumatoid factors in cryoglobulinemia). IgM exists as a pentamer with disulfide bonding of IgM monomers to each other and to the J chain (Figure 16.2A). IgM is an excellent agglutinin and activator of complement, and its 10 antigen binding sites may provide high avidity even when the affinity of each site is
(A)
low. The majority of IgM (80%) is intravascular, and its half-life is 5 days.
IgG IgG has four subclasses: IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, and IgG4 (Figure 16.2C). IgG is distributed equally between the intravascular and extravascular compartments. The mean half-life for IgG is the longest of any plasma protein,
(B) VH
Vκ/Vλ Cκ/Cλ
SS
SS
CH1
CH2 CH3
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
S SSS
SSS S
SS
SS SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
J chain
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
CH4
SS SS
SS
secretory component
SS
J chain
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
IgA dimer
IgM pentamer
SS
SS SS
IgG1
SS
SS SS SS SS
SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
SS
(C)
SS SS
IgG4
IgG2
IgG3
FIGURE 16.2 (A) Structure of an IgM pentamer with disulfide bonding of IgM monomers to each other and to the J chain. (B) Structure of dimeric IgA, associated with the J chain and covalently attached to the secretory component. (C) Structures of four IgG subclasses that differ in length due to the number of disulfide bondings between the Ig heavy chains.
392
PART | 2
approximately 23 days. Moreover, the half-life or fractional catabolic rate of IgG is not fixed but varies inversely with the concentration of IgG. Thus, the half-life of IgG in patients with agammaglobulinemia may be greater than 35 days, but it may be as short as 10 days in patients with hypergammaglobulinemia. IgG1, IgG2, and IgG4 all have a 23-day half-life, but the half-life of IgG3 is only 9 days. The long half-life of IgG and its unique relationship to serum levels are due to the FcRn, or Fc receptor of the neonate,3 5 which was originally described on neonatal intestinal epithelium in animals, where it mediates uptake of colostral IgG from the gut. However, FcRn is also located widely on vascular endothelium, permitting continued re-entry of tissue IgG back into the bloodstream and thus extending its effective half-life. Differences in the regulation of IgG subclass expression are evident by the strikingly different levels in serum and characteristic differences in ontogeny. In infants, IgG1 and IgG3 levels increase quickly with age; IgG2 and IgG4 display a slower increase and reach adult levels at puberty (Figure 16.3). The order of appearance of the IgG subclasses in children follows precisely the downstream order of the IgG heavy chain constant region gene segments on chromosome 14 (Cγ3, Cγ1, Cγ2, Cγ4) (Figure 16.1B). The half-life of IgG3 is 9 days less than half that of the other subclasses. IgG3 and IgG4 are more susceptible to proteolytic digestion than the other subclasses. IgG subclass restriction has been reported for antibodies against many bacterial and viral antigens. Antibody titers to pneumococcal polysaccharides correlate best with serum IgG2 concentrations.6 In adults antibody activity to polysaccharides is found predominantly in the IgG2 fraction,7,8 whereas tetanus antibody is found predominantly in the IgG1 subclass9 and the high titers of
1000
Serum concentration (mg/dl)
IgG1 IgG2 100
IgG3 IgG4
10
1 0
2
4
6
8
10 Years
12
14
Adult
FIGURE 16.3 Kinetics of IgG subclass expression level in serum.
Primary Immune Deficiencies
antibody in patients with chronic schistosomiasis10 and filariasis11 are limited to the IgG4 subclass.
IgA and Secretory IgA IgA is synthesized primarily by plasma cells located in the lamina propria just below the basement membrane of the epithelium, at surfaces of exocrine glands and all mucous membranes. Some of the IgA, mostly in a monomeric form, enters the blood and circulates as serum IgA, with a half-life of about 9 days. In other plasma cells, two monomeric IgA molecules bind through their carboxy end to the J chain (Figure 16.2B). Dimeric IgA, associated with the J chain, is secreted by the plasma cell and binds to the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (poly-Ig receptor) on the basolateral surface of mucosal epithelial cells. Binding of the IgA results in its internalization and transport in a transcytotic vesicle to the apical (luminal) surface of the epithelial cell. At the apical surface, the extracellular, ligand-binding portion of the poly-Ig receptor is enzymatically cleaved and becomes the secretory component (SC) that remains covalently attached to secretory IgA (Figure 16.2B). Secretory IgA is then released from the cell into the mucosal site. The 80-kDa SC renders secretory IgA resistant to proteolytic cleavage at these mucosal locations.
IgE IgE mediates type 1 hypersensitivity allergic reactions. Plasma levels of IgE are normally very low (100,000-fold lower than for IgG), but can be markedly increased in certain allergic conditions, such as bronchopulmonary aspergillosis, or with parasitic diseases, such as schistosomiasis. IgE plasma cells are present in mucosal areas, especially in the respiratory tract, where the secreted IgE mediates allergic reactions, and the gastrointestinal tract, where it may mediate expulsion of parasitic worm infestations. The halflife of IgE in plasma is only 2 3 days, but is prolonged to 2 3 weeks after IgE binds to the Fc receptor FcεRI on the surface of mast cells, basophils, or dendritic cells.
ISOTYPE DEFECTS Several disorders are described to result from isotype defects. These include: (1) Ig heavy chain deletions; (2) Igκ and Igλ chain deficiency; (3) isolated IgG subclass deficiency; (4) IgA with IgG subclass deficiency; (5) selective IgA deficiency; and (6) selective IgM deficiency (summarized in Table 16.2).12,13 Except for selective IgM deficiency, these disorders have been included in the IUIS classification for primary immunodeficiencies.14 They are all characterized by aberrant serum Ig expression, but they do not always result in clinical symptoms. The frequency
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
393
TABLE 16.2 Characteristics of the Six Disorders Caused by Isotype Defects Isotype Disorder Serum Ig
Associated Features
Genetic Defect
Frequency
1. Ig heavy chain deletion
One or more IgG and/or IgA May be asymptomatic subclasses as well as IgE may be absent
Chromosomal deletion at 14q32
Relatively common
2. Igκ deficiency
All immunoglobulins have lambda or kappa light chains
Asymptomatic
Mutations or deletions in IGK
Extremely rare
3. IgG subclass deficiency
Reduction in one or more IgG subclasses
Usually asymptomatic; a minority may have poor antibody response to specific antigens and recurrent viral/bacterial infections
Unknown
Relatively common
4. IgA with IgG subclass deficiency
Reduced IgA with decrease in one or more IgG subclasses
In majority, recurrent bacterial infections
Unknown
Relatively common
5. Selective IgA deficiency
IgA decreased/absent
Usually asymptomatic; may have recurrent infections, allergies, or autoimmune diseases
Unknown
Most common
6. Selective IgM deficiency
Reduced IgM
Infections, atopy, autoimmunity or malignant conditions, but may also be symptomatic
Unknown
Rare
Table based on Notarangelo et al. (2013)13; Al-Herz et al. (2011).12
of isotype defects varies from extremely rare (Igκ and Igλ chain deficiency) to the most common primary immunodeficiency (selective IgA deficiency). Deletions in the Ig heavy chain genes and mutations in the Igκ and Igλ chain genes are the only proven genetic defects described so far.
Ig Heavy Chain Deletions
Clinical Presentation Ig heavy chain deletions are generally asymptomatic and do not require treatment. For specific deletions involving one or more classes or isotypes (IgG and/or IgA) giving rise to partial IgA deficiency and/or IgG subclass deficiency, see accompanying sections.
Definition
Igκ and Igλ Light Chain Deficiency
Patients with Ig heavy chain deletions lack one or more IgG, IgA, and/or IgE classes due to a biallelic genetic deletion. Ig heavy chain deletions can be asymptomatic but can also present as isotype deficiency, depending on the deleted part of the Ig locus.
Definition
Genetics Ig heavy chain deletion is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by chromosomal deletions of a cluster of genes, the constant regions of the IgG and/or IgA and IgE genes (OMIM #147100). In this disorder deletion of IgM is not involved, because deletions of the IGHM gene, which are mediated via transposable elements,14 give rise to agammaglobulinemia; without IgM expression the precursor B cell differentiation is blocked at the pre-B-II cell stage and no mature B cells can be formed.15 Deletion of the IgG locus was first described by Lefranc et al. in 198216 and further extended by Bottaro et al..17 Homologous recombination is involved in the deletion process, and several deletion haplotypes have been described (Figure 16.4).17 19
Deficiency of immunoglobulin kappa or lambda light chains (Igκ and Igλ) is an autosomal recessive disorder in which all immunoglobulin molecules express only a Igκ or Igλ light chain. In the case of heterozygous defects in the IGK or IGL genes, the ratio between Igκ and Igλ expression deviates from the normal ratio (1.5 2.1).20 Igκ and Igλ deficiencies are asymptomatic, but can be seen in combination with other conditions.
Genetics Igκ deficiency is caused by mono- or biallelic mutations in the IGK gene (OMIM #147200, chromosome 2p11).
Pathogenesis During precursor B cell development in bone marrow, V(D)J recombination is initiated at the IGH locus.21 If this results in expression of a functional Igμ chain, V(D)J
394
PART | 2
V DJ
Cμ
Cδ
Cγ3C
Cγ1
Ψε
Cα1
Ψγ
Primary Immune Deficiencies
Cγ2
Cγ4
Cε
Cα2
5'
3' Sμ
Sγ3
Sγ1
Sα1
Sγ2
Sγ4
Sε
Sα2
5'γ3 – 5'γ1 5'γ3 – 5'γ4 3'γ3
–
3'γ1
3'γ3 – 3'Ψγ/ 5'γ1 – 5'γ2 3'γ3 – 3'γ2/ 5'γ1 – 5'γ4 3'γ3
–
3'γ4 3'γ1 – 3'Ψγ 3'γ1 – 3'γ2
γ1Ψε – γ4ε / 3'γ1 – 3'γ4 Ψεα1 – εα2 3'α1 – 3'α2 3'Ψγ – 3'γ2 / 5'γ2 – 5'γ4 3'Ψγ
–
3'γ4 3'γ2 – 3'γ4
FIGURE 16.4 Deletions due to homologous recombination in the IGH locus; colored boxes represent haplotypes that have been described whereas white boxes indicate deletions that would be the result of homologous recombination, but have not yet been found. Figure adapted from Olsson et al.19
recombination continues at the IGK locus in an attempt to generate an Igκ light chain that matches the Igμ chain forming the B cell receptor. If no functional Igκ light chain is formed, V(D)J recombination takes place at the IGL locus in order to generate a functional Igλ chain.22 Expression of Igκ occurs more frequently than Igλ, resulting in an Igκ/λ distribution between 1.5 2.1.23
Clinical Presentation Deficiencies of Igκ or Igλ have been reported in a few individuals with immune deficiency. Zegers et al. described a patient with complete absence of Igκ expression, cystic fibrosis, and selective IgA deficiency.24 A sister had a similar Igκ deficiency. Sequence analysis of the patient’s constant region of the IGK gene revealed two different missense mutations, one in each allele, resulting in substitution of a single amino acid in the Igκ light chain molecule.25 A patient with a heterozygous deletion of chromosome 2 region p11.2p13, including the IGK locus, had
dysmorphism of the face, genital region, and limbs, psychomotor retardation, and vitiligo.26 He had a significantly reduced Igκ:Igλ ratio of 0.7, but did not have immunological aberrations or clinical signs of immune deficiency. Earlier reports describe patients with disturbed Igκ:Igλ ratios, but these were not genetically confirmed. Bernier et al. described a child with recurrent respiratory infections and diarrhea who had an Igκ:Igλ ratio of 0.66.27 She also had an IgA deficiency but normal IgG and some antibody function. Barandun and co-workers reported two boys with hypogammaglobulinemia, frequent infections, and pernicious anemia. One had an Igκ:Igλ ratio of 0.01 (Igκ deficiency) and the other a ratio of 6.0 (Igλ deficiency), but no genetic studies were reported.28
Diagnostics Diagnosis is made by assessing serum levels of Igκ and Igλ chains or by immunoelectrophoretic analysis of the patient’s serum with antisera to Igκ and Igλ.
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
Alternatively, flow cytometric immunophenotyping of Igκ and Igλ expression on peripheral blood B cells can be used for assessing the Igκ:Igλ ratio. Molecular diagnosis can be made by genetic analysis of the IGK locus.
395
Except for the IGHC gene deletions as found in a few patients, the molecular mechanisms of IgG subclass deficiencies in the majority of patients are not exactly known, but are presumed to be due to an aberrant regulation of expression of IGHC genes. As a result, many of the IgG subclass deficiencies are not restricted to a single subclass, but often affect multiple isotypes within a given region of the IGHC locus i.e., IgG2/IgG4 or IgG1/IgG3.30 Aberrant regulation may involve negatively altered regulation of germline transcription through the S and C regions upon activation by particular cytokines.30,31 Alternatively, deregulation of cytokine expression itself can be implicated in IgG subclass deficiency via their ability to regulate germline transcription. For example, defective IFN-γ production has been reported in IgG2 subclass deficiency, although its exact role in the pathogenesis remains to be defined.32
with an IgG1 subclass deficiency generally have some degree of hypogammaglobulinemia (because IgG1 makes up 70% of the total IgG), but some IgG1 is present. IgG subclass deficiency is usually identified among individuals with recurrent upper respiratory infections or lung problems such as asthma, bronchitis, or bronchiectasis. IgG subclass deficiency may also occur as part of another primary immunodeficiency syndrome (e.g., selective IgA deficiency [sIgAD], impaired polysaccharide responsiveness, ataxia-telangiectasia, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome)34 or as part of a secondary antibody deficiency (e.g., HIV infection, cirrhosis). As patients with CVID have low serum IgG by definition, variable decreases in IgG subclasses are always found. Subclass defects have also been noted in a number of autoimmune disorders (e.g., immune thrombocytopenic purpura [ITP], lupus erythematosus) and as part of several miscellaneous syndromes. Subclass deficiency should be suspected in patients who have recurrent respiratory infections, similarly to patients with impaired polysaccharide responsiveness (see Chapter 17) or sIgAD (see below). The usual respiratory infections are chronic otitis, sinusitis, or bronchitis, but occasionally may be more serious, such as mastoiditis, pneumonia, or bronchiectasis. The offending bacteria are often those with a polysaccharide capsule, such as pneumococci, H. influenzae, meningococci, and group B streptococci. Some patients present with refractory asthma triggered by respiratory infections. Some patients are identified after laboratory testing discloses decreased antibody function, including poor polysaccharide antibody responses (see Chapter 17). Some subclass-deficient patients are identified in patients with low normal IgG levels or selective IgA deficiency. Many patients with an IgG subclass deficiency are not ill or have only mild respiratory symptoms. If their antibody function is intact, the subclass deficiency is less likely to be the cause of these symptoms. Most of these patients have low but not absent IgG1, IgG2, or IgG3 levels. IgG4 also may be absent in a significant percentage (i.e., 10 20%) of subjects, depending on the sensitivity of the assay. A clinically significant subclass deficiency necessitates an accompanying antibody deficiency with poor or absent response to vaccine antigens. Most of these latter patients have refractory respiratory infections. IgG subclass deficiencies are often multiple (affecting more subclasses) and may be associated with selective IgA deficiency. Although clinical features alone do not allow identification of which particular subclass is deficient, each subclass deficiency has some characteristic clinical features.
Clinical Presentation
IgG1 Deficiency
Most IgG subclass-deficient subjects are asymptomatic, particularly those with an IgG4 deficiency.33 Patients
IgG1 deficiency is usually associated with hypogammaglobulinemia because IgG1 makes up 70% of the total
IgG Subclass Deficiency Definition Selective IgG subclass deficiency is defined as a deficiency of one or more IgG subclasses but normal total IgG concentrations.29 The usual criterion of an IgG subclass deficiency is a level less than 2 SDs below the mean for age. Up to 20% of the population has a subnormal IgG subclass level for one or more subclasses. Most IgG subclass-deficient subjects are asymptomatic, particularly those with an IgG4 deficiency. Thus, IgG subclass deficiency does not define a disease; instead, it denotes a clinical laboratory finding. A clinically significant IgG subclass deficiency occurs when the IgG subclass deficiency is associated with recurrent infection and a significant defect in antibody responsiveness.
Genetics IgG subclass deficiency has been shown in a few cases to be due to homozygous deletions of the corresponding constant region of the IGH locus (IGHC genes; see section above), created by non-equal homologous recombination or looping out excision.16 18
Pathogenesis
396
IgG, and if low, the total IgG level is low. Therefore, most of the patients with IgG1 deficiency will be classified as common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) if IgA or IgM, or both, is also reduced (see Chapter 14). Selective IgG1 deficiency with normal total IgG would be uncommon. IgG1 deficiency is considerably more frequent in adults than children and is often associated with other subclass deficiencies.35 Many of the pediatric IgG1deficient patients are younger than 5 years of age and are emerging from transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy. Older patients with IgG1 deficiency may be developing CVID. IgG2 Deficiency After IgG4 deficiency, IgG2 deficiency is the most common subclass deficiency in children, and males are more commonly affected than females.35 In children, it is the subclass deficiency most often associated with recurrent infections. Most symptomatic patients have recurrent or chronic respiratory infections, often with H. influenzae or pneumococci. Others may have allergy and asthma, and a rare child has severe infections, including meningitis.36,37 O’Keefe and Finnegan38 reported IgG2 deficiency in many patients with obstructive lung disease, particularly in those with long duration of disease and receiving steroid therapy. Because IgG2 contains most of the antibodies to polysaccharide antigens, a deficiency of IgG2 is often associated with impaired polysaccharide responsiveness.39 41 Some of these children have permanent, but more commonly transient, defects in their ability to respond to polysaccharide antigens.42 44 However, among adults, Avanzini and colleagues45 could not correlate antibody responses to H. influenzae conjugate vaccines, IgG subclass deficiencies, and respiratory problems.45 IgG2 deficiency may be a marker for recurrent respiratory responses, rather than the cause of the problem.43 IgG3 Deficiency IgG3 deficiency is less common than IgG4 or IgG2 deficiency in children; however, the frequencies vary considerably between different studies46 for example, some studies reported IgG3 as the most common IgG subclass deficiency,47,48 perhaps because it is considerably more common in adults.35 IgG3 antibodies may be important in the response to respiratory viral infections as well as responses to Moraxella catarrhalis and Streptococcus pyogenes.8,49,50 Most symptomatic IgG3-deficient patients have an associated deficiency of another subclass. These patients have recurrent respiratory infection,51 including refractory sinusitis52 54 or asthma.52,55,56 IgG3 deficiency has also been described in a patient with recurrent lymphocytic meningitis,57 and in patients with an elevated
PART | 2
Primary Immune Deficiencies
IgE and recurrent infections (often with an IgA or IgG4 deficiency)58 and recurrent parotitis.59 IgG4 Deficiency IgG4 deficiency is the most common subclass immunodeficiency. Using insensitive assays such as radial diffusion of immunoprecipitation in which levels less than 5 7 mg/dl are recorded as absent, up to 15% of normal children and 10% of adults may have an IgG4 deficiency.33 Most are asymptomatic. In infants younger than 5 years, the incidence of IgG4 is even higher. Using more sensitive assays, such as ELISA or radioimmunoassay, IgG4 is detectable in nearly all sera, and a deficiency can be defined as a level less than 1 mg/dl.60 Although most IgG4-deficient patients are asymptomatic, several groups have identified IgG4deficient patients who have recurrent respiratory (particularly pulmonary) infection and bronchiectasis.60 62 Hill and co-workers found an IgG4 deficiency in 5% of patients with bronchiectasis, while other subclass deficiencies were found in 1% of patients.63 IgG4 deficiency may be a marker for susceptibility to respiratory infection, possibly associated with an enrichment of IgG4 in the secretions.62,64 Most of these patients have normal antibody responses to vaccine antigens. IgG4 deficiency is often associated with IgG2 deficiency, IgA deficiency, or combined IgG2 IgA deficiency, and many of these children have recurrent infections and poor antibody responses to polysaccharide antigens.62,65 The contribution of the IgG4 deficiency to their infection susceptibility is not known. IgG4 deficiency has been noted in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, IgM deficiency34 ataxia-telangiectasia,56 and mucocutaneous candidiasis.66 Other disorders with IgG4 deficiency include Down syndrome,67 immune thrombocytopenia, lupus erythematosus, and growth hormone deficiency (with IgG2 deficiency).34,68
Diagnostics IgG subclass determinations are not recommended in the initial evaluation of individuals with recurrent infection, because functional antibody studies are the paramount test; in the presence of normal antibody function, a subclass deficiency is not clinically significant. Some authorities question the value of subclass determination at any time.33,69 We recommend IgG subclass determinations for patients with selective IgA deficiency, for patients with detectable immunoglobulins but selective antibody deficiencies, and for patients in which an early stage of CVID is suspected. IgG subclass tests will also pick up clonal proliferations, and excesses of one subclass over all the others is suggestive of this. IgG subclass levels must be compared with age-matched controls because levels increase with age, particularly in the first 2 years. For children aged 4 to 10 years, an IgG1 level less than
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
250 mg/dl, an IgG2 level less than 50 mg/dl, an IgG3 level less than 15 mg/dl, and an IgG4 level less than 1 mg/dl are considered abnormal. For subjects older than age 10, an IgG1 level less than 300 mg/dl, an IgG2 level less than 75 mg/dl, an IgG3 level less than 25 mg/dl, and an IgG4 level less than 1 mg/dl are abnormal. If radial diffusion is used to measure IgG4, levels between 1 mg/dl and 8 mg/dl are usually reported as non-detectable, thus increasing the frequency of the diagnosis of IgG4 deficiency. However, to substantiate a clinically significant subclass deficiency, the response to protein and/or polysaccharide antigens must be deficient, as outlined in Chapter 17 and in the section on impaired polysaccharide responsiveness in this chapter. The definition of a poor response to pneumococcal antigens is that used in the impaired polysaccharide-responsive patients (i.e., failure to respond to a majority of the pneumococcal antigens following a pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine, or failure to exhibit a two-fold rise in titer to serotypes for which there are non-protective levels). Most patients with an IgG4 deficiency are excluded by this criterion. Because one or more IgG subclasses are depressed in transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy (THI), a subclass deficiency can rarely be diagnosed before age 4.70 Instead, these patients most likely have THI.
Management Asymptomatic individuals with one or more subclass deficiencies and normal antibody responses require no treatment. Because only a tiny percentage of these patients (particularly those with IgG1, IgG2, or IgG3 deficiencies) may show evolution into CVID, individuals with respiratory infections and an IgG subclass deficiency but with normal antibody function are not candidates for Ig replacement therapy; indeed, this is probably the most common reason for the misuse of Ig treatment.71 Alternative treatments, such as antibiotics, inhaled steroids, bronchodilators, and surgical procedures for obstructive lesions, may be needed. Individuals with severe recurrent respiratory infections and a subclass deficiency (sometimes with an associated IgA deficiency), as well as a documented antibody deficiency, may benefit from Ig therapy. This is particularly true for individuals who have deficient antibody responses to both protein and polysaccharide antigens. A failure of prolonged antibiotics, severe symptoms, and persistent radiographic abnormalities also favors the use of IG replacement. Under such circumstances, Ig therapy can be given as for other patients with primary antibody deficiency. This has reportedly been effective in reducing infection in several patients with subclass deficiencies.72 When the Ig replacement therapy is to be discontinued after several months of therapy, it should be stopped in the warmer months to avoid community respiratory viral
397
infections (which will be blamed on cessation of the therapy). The child younger than age 5 years with frequent, non-life endangering respiratory infections and a subclass deficiency or impaired polysaccharide responsiveness is a special problem. Lawton points out that most infectionprone children attending preschool who are given Ig replacement will almost certainly have a decreased number of respiratory infections,70 and if a mild immunodeficiency has been diagnosed as the cause this will emphatically affirm the diagnosis, and the parents will be reluctant to stop Ig treatment. Indeed, if stopped, the frequency of infection increases temporarily, and lessens the physician’s credibility.
Prognosis Children younger than ages 6 to 8 years usually outgrow their IgG subclass deficiency, but adults rarely do. Recovery is more common if the subclass is low but not absent. A rare patient may progress to CVID.
Selective IgA Deficiency Definition Selective IgA deficiency (sIgAD; OMIM #137100) defines a disorder with serum IgA levels ,0.07 g/l or less, with normal IgM and IgG levels in individuals $ 4 years of age (definition as established by the Pan-American Group for Immunodeficiencies and the European Society for Immunodeficiencies).13 Most individuals are clinically asymptomatic; however, sIgAD can be associated with recurrent infections, allergies, and autoimmunity.
Genetics Although the genetic cause for sIgAD is unknown, there is evidence for a genetic predisposition based on familial clustering and association with known genetic loci. The pattern of sIgAD inheritance is unclear; however, a family history (first degree relatives) for sIgAD or common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is a significant risk factor.73 75 In 2005, two groups reported that genetic variants in the TNFRSF13B gene, which encodes TACI (transmembrane activator and CAML interactor), were associated with sIgAD and CVID.76,77 While TACI mediates isotype switching in B cells (for details see Chapter 14), another study did not find that these variants as associated with IgA deficiency. In addition, TACI variants can also be found in healthy individuals,78,79 suggesting that these variants are disease-modifying rather than disease-causing.80 Associations between sIgAD and certain major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I, II, and III haplotypes have been proposed for many years.81 In sIgAD and type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D), HLA-B8 frequency was found to
398
be increased in some studies. HLA-B8 frequency was also higher in IgA deficiency and autoimmune disorders. However, these findings may be secondary to the presence of diabetes mellitus or autoimmune disorders rather than sIgAD itself.82 A recent study questioning the frequently implied higher risk for sIgAD deficiency with the HLA8 DR3 haplotype has shown that sIgAD is not associated with a distinct haplotype; rather, the risk is conferred by the common extended MHC haplotype HLA A1, B8, DR3, and DQ2 (the 8.1 haplotype) acting in a multiplicative manner.83 In some populations up to 45% of IgAD patients carry at least one copy of the ancestral 8.1 haplotype, as compared with 16% in the general population, and homozygosity for this haplotype increases the risk even further.83 The HLA-DR7, DQ2, and DR1, DQ5 haplotypes have also been shown to be risk factors for sIgAD, whereas the DR15, DQ6 haplotype has been reported to confer an almost complete protection against the disorder.84,85 Association of non-HLA genes with sIgAD has recently been demonstrated for IFIH1 and CLEC16A in a genome-wide association study.86 A non-synonymous variant in the IFIH1 gene, encoding the interferon-induced helicase C domain-containing protein 1, was associated not only with sIgAD but also with T1D and SLE.87 IFIH1 functions together with RIG-1 as sensor for viral infections.85,88 Similarly, variants in the C-type lectin domain family 16 gene (CLEC16A), which functions on B cells, NK cells, and dendritic cells, were found to be associated not only with sIgAD,86 but also with other autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes and multiple sclerosis.89 These findings support the hypothesis that autoimmune mechanisms may contribute to the pathogenesis of sIgAD.
Pathogenesis The exact pathological mechanism of sIgAD is unknown, but it is believed to be a heterogeneous disorder that arises through several mechanisms. Patients with sIgAD have reduced IgA-positive switched memory B cells similarly to CVID, but the reduction is less pronounced.90,91 Although reduced, IgA-positive B cells are present, but apparently they fail in differentiation into IgA-secreting plasma cells in vitro upon stimulation with IL-10 and CD40L.92 T cell abnormalities have often been sought in sIgAD, because a T cell regulatory abnormality is an attractive hypothesis.93 A reversible T cell influence might explain why IgA deficiency can resolve spontaneously after exposure to certain drugs. Despite these reasons for suspecting a T cell defect in IgA deficiency, few IgA-deficient patients seem to have identifiable defects using current analytical methods. IgA deficiency is associated with certain MHC haplotypes (see Genetics, above). This suggests that the inheritance of a certain gene in the MHC area of chromosome 6
PART | 2
Primary Immune Deficiencies
confers susceptibility to IgA deficiency. A gene of this sort may potentially activate IgA B cell maturation. Molecular analyses have demonstrated some errors of switch (S)μ to Sα recombinations in peripheral B cells from IgA-deficient subjects. Two types of defects low expression of both secreted and membrane forms of productive constant (C), a messenger RNA (mRNA) in IgAswitched B cells and impaired IgA switching were characterized in IgA-deficient subjects homozygous for the MHC haplotype (HLA-B8, HLA-SC01, HLA-DR3). This could reflect a blockade in post-IgA switch differentiation of B cells.94
Clinical Presentation sIgAD was first described in children with ataxia-telangiectasia,95 but soon sIgAD was identified in other patients and even in healthy subjects. Most individuals with IgA deficiency (85 90%) are clinically asymptomatic82; however, recurrent respiratory and gastrointestinal tract infections and allergy have often been reported both in children and adults.96 99 sIgAD is the most common primary immunodeficiency in whites, with an estimated frequency of 1:600.100 Its prevalence ranges from 1:155 to 1:18550 in community populations from different countries.101,102 Some studies have investigated the prevalence of sIgAD in predominantly male blood donors or in Rhnegative women. Although there are no apparent gender differences in the occurrence of sIgAD in healthy persons,103 male IgA-deficient individuals appear more prevalent in hospitalized groups.104 sIgAD may occasionally be familial, and several studies have noted a higher frequency of mother-to-child inheritance of sIgAD than of father-to-child inheritance.73,105 Investigation of families in which IgA deficiency and common variable immunodeficiency were present in more than one individual showed that 30 affected children had affected fathers whereas 118 children had unaffected fathers. In contrast, 75 affected children were born to affected mothers, and 95 affected children were born to unaffected mothers.106 One explanation is the potential transplacental passage of anti-IgA antibodies, which could result in sIgAD in the infant. Petty and colleagues studied 27 offspring of IgA-deficient mothers; 12 had IgA levels more than 1 standard deviation (SD) below normal, and 7 had levels more than 2 SDs below normal. Of the 7 with the lowest IgA levels, 5 had mothers with anti-IgA antibodies during gestation.107 IgA Deficiency in Healthy Subjects Because secretory IgA is important in protecting mucous surfaces, it is of course a mystery why most IgA-deficient subjects remain healthy. This lack of disease in sIgAD has been attributed to a compensatory increase in IgM in the
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
secretions.108 In IgA-deficient individuals there may be an increase in secretory IgM (lgM attached to secretory component) in the saliva and other intestinal fluids, and in IgM-bearing plasma cells in the gastrointestinal mucosa. Similarly, the colostrum of IgA-deficient subjects has been shown to contain abundant amounts of IgM.109 The saliva of IgA-deficient individuals contains biologically active IgM antibody, such as secretory IgM to Streptococcus mutans.110 Although secretory IgM is functionally active, it may not confer mucosal protection equivalent to that of secretory IgA. Norhagen and associates questioned the view that IgM can compensate for sIgAD in the secretions, but could not relate salivary IgM levels to health or frequency of illness in 63 IgA-deficient subjects.111 Conversely, Mellander and colleagues found that infections are more common in IgA-deficient individuals with low or absent secretory IgM.112 Nilssen and co-workers have shown that oral cholera-vaccinated, IgA-deficient individuals preferentially activate intestinal IgG-producing cells rather than IgM.113 The response to this vaccination (which in normal subjects produces a predominantly IgA response) was not significantly different from that in healthy, asymptomatic IgA-deficient individuals. Another reason some IgA-deficient individuals might remain healthy is that secretory IgA is produced in normal amounts in up to 3% of IgA-deficient individuals having normal levels of secretory IgA114 and possessing normal numbers of IgA-bearing plasma cells in the intestine. In any case, sIgAD in healthy adults appears to be a stable defect over many years of follow-up. sIgAD in Specific Disorders Despite the fact that most IgA-deficient subjects are not ill, sIgAD has been associated with an large number of specific disorders.81,115 118 Jorgensen et al. studied 32 adults with sIgAD and compared them with 63 age- and gender-matched controls.99 The sIgAD individuals reported significantly more often with various upper and lower respiratory infections and increased prevalence of allergic diseases and autoimmunity, with a total of 84.4% being affected by any of these diseases, compared with a total of 47.6% of the controls (P , 0.01). sIgAD and Sinopulmonary Infections Recurrent sinopulmonary infections are the most common illnesses associated with sIgAD. These infections are mostly due to encapsulated bacteria, such as Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pnemoniae.82 Children with sIgAD experience recurrent otitis media, sinusitis, and/or pneumonia. Recurrent upper respiratory tract infections are more frequent than lower respiratory tract infections (77.1% versus 22.9%).97 Adults with sIgAD also suffer from recurrent sinusitis and pulmonary infections, but
399
otits media is less common. There are several reports of chronic serious lung disease in sIgAD, including sarcoidosis, recurrent pneumonia, chronic obstructive lung disease and chronic bronchitis, and pulmonary hemosiderosis.115,119,120 Some patients may develop end organ damage such as bronchiectasis secondary to recurring or chronic infections.121,122 sIgAD and Allergy sIgAD has long been associated with the development of allergy.97,104,123,124 The most common allergic disorders in IgA-deficient individuals are allergic conjunctivitis, rhinitis, urticaria, atopic eczema, and bronchial asthma.115,125,126 Many clinicians notice that IgA-deficient subjects with asthma have a worse disease severity compared to controls99; perhaps their susceptibility to secondary respiratory infections aggravates the associated inflammation. Food allergy may be more common in IgA-deficient patients.124 However, it should be noted that serum IgE levels are often reduced in individuals with sIgAD,85 and in another study in adults atopy was not found to be more frequent in sIgAD as compared to controls.127 sIgAD and Gastrointestinal Tract Disorders Patients with sIgAD have an increased frequency of gastrointestinal diseases. The best known association is infection with Giardia lamblia.128,129 Presumably the lack of secretory IgA permits the attachment to and proliferation of these protozoa on the intestinal epithelium.130,131 If giardiasis occurs in sIgAD, malabsorption resulting from flattened villi, often accompanied by nodular lymphoid hyperplasia, may develop. Diagnosis warrants multiple stool analyses and an examination of the duodenal fluid. Relapses after treatment with metronidazole or quinacrine hydrochloride are fairly common. The most common non-infectious gastrointestinal complication in patients with sIgAD is celiac disease.132,133 Conversely, sIgAD is present in 2% of celiac patients and is equally prevalent among adults and children.134 Such patients will lack the characteristic IgA anti-endomysial antibody used in diagnosis of celiac disease,135 but IgG serologies may be persistently elevated despite histology recovery.134 IgG anti-tTG and IgG EMA autoantibody tests are highly efficient in detecting celiac disease in IgAdeficient patients.136 139 Intestinal biopsy specimens of patients with co-existing sIgAD and celiac disease are similar to those of patients with celiac disease alone, and their responses to a gluten-free diet are also similar.140 Inflammatory bowel disease, including ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, also occur with increased frequency in sIgAD,141 although the pathophysiologic relationship is unclear.142 144
400
Nodular lymphoid hyperplasia and malabsorption are associated with sIgAD too,145,146 but malabsorption can be present without nodular lymphoid hyperplasia.147 Severe diarrhea in association with sIgAD and lymphoid hyperplasia or malabsorption may be difficult to treat. Associations between sIgAD and other autoimmune intestinal diseases have included chronic hepatitis,148 biliary cirrhosis,149 and pernicious anemia.150 Ulcerative colitis and regional enteritis are also associated with sIgAD. IgA Deficiency and Autoimmune Diseases Autoantibodies, such as antibodies against sulfatide, Jo-1, cardiolipin, phosphatidylserine, and collagen, can be detected in up to 90% of IgA-deficient patients even if clinical disease is not found.151 Also, in children an increased frequency of autoantibodies is found without correlation with clinical manifestation.152 Patients with sIgAD can also develop overt autoimmune diseases,133 of which systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)153 155 and juvenile or adult-onset rheumatoid arthritis156 158 are the most commonly reported. Autoimmune diseases are highly prevalent in individuals with IgAD and more common in their first-degree relatives than expected, thus suggesting a possible common genetic component.159 An association of Graves’ disease and type 1 diabetes has also been described.85,133,160 Genetic factors are important for the development of both IgAD and various autoimmune disorders, including Graves disease, SLE, type 1 diabetes, celiac disease, myasthenia gravis, and rheumatoid arthritis, and a strong association with the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region has been reported. In addition, non-MHC genes, such as interferon-induced helicase 1 (IFIH1) and c-type lectin domain family 16, member A (CLEC16A), are also associated with the development of IgAD and some of the autoimmune diseases.133 sIgAD and Malignancy Carcinoma (particularly adenocarcinoma of the stomach) and lymphoma (usually of B cell origin) are also associated with IgA deficiency.161 Often the lymphomas are extranodal and involve the jejunum. Whether nodular lymphoid hyperplasia leads to lymphoma is not known. In one cancer hospital, 12 of 4210 patients had selective IgA deficiency an incidence of 1 in 342 (0.3%). However, there are no data demonstrating a substantially increased risk of malignancies in sIgAD.
PART | 2
level was lower than 5 mg/dl; in most such cases, however, the IgA level is between 5 and 30 mg/dl (i.e., partial IgA deficiency).164 In a follow-up study of 40 children with sIgAD, four boys showed a rise in serum IgA levels to low normal levels.165 Resolution of IgA deficiency is much more common in children under 5 years of age,166 presumably the result of a delayed maturation of the IgA system. IgA deficiency can be acquired following drug therapy or viral infection. Penicillamine,167 sulfasalazine,168 hydantoin,169,170 cyclosporine,171 fenclofenac,172 sodium valproate,173 and captopril can produce a usually reversible IgA deficiency174 (see also Box 16.1). On the other hand, congenital rubella and Epstein-Barr virus infections may result in persistent IgA deficiency.175 A unique case of acquired IgA deficiency was reported by Hammarstrom and colleagues,176 who noted that an IgA-deficient bone marrow transplant donor transferred the deficiency to the recipient, who previously had normal IgA levels. Many patients have a serum IgA level lower than expected for age (i.e., less than 2 SDs from the mean, but above 7 mg/dl), a condition that can be considered “partial” IgA deficiency. This is more common in children, presumably because of the immaturity of the IgA system. As noted earlier, such patients are more likely to undergo spontaneous remission. Partial IgA deficiency can be the result of deletions of genes controlling either the α1 or α2 chains, a condition termed selective IgA1 (or IgA2) subclass deficiency.19
Anti-IgA Antibodies A significant proportion of IgA-deficient individuals have anti-IgA antibodies in their serum.186 Anti-IgA antibodies can be directed to IgA1 (most commonly), IgA2, or the allotypic variants A2m(1) or A2m(2). These antibodies occur with a reported frequency of 9.6% to 44% in IgAdeficient subjects.187,188 Although blood or blood products
Box 16.1 Drugs that can Cause Reversible sIgAD G G G G G G G
Other Forms of IgA Deficiency: Transient, Acquired, Partial, and Selective Although IgA deficiency is generally a permanent condition,162 occasionally a spontaneous remission occurs i.e., transient IgA deficiency.163 In a few such instances of transient IgA deficiency with recovery, the original IgA
Primary Immune Deficiencies
G G
D-Pencillamine167,177 Sulfasalazine168 Hydantoin169,170 Cyclosporine171 Fenclofenac172 Gold178 Anticonvulsants179 G phenytoin180,181 G valproic acid173 G carbamazepine182 G zonisamide183 Captopril174,184 Thyroxine185
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
given to IgA-deficient individuals with high titers of antiIgA antibodies can lead to severe, even fatal, transfusion reactions, such reactions are actually quite rare.189 191 Hospitalized patients, some of whom are certain to be IgA deficient, are not screened for anti-IgA antibodies prior to blood transfusions. The actual incidence of anti-IgAmediated blood infusion reactions, due to anti-IgA antibodies, has been estimated as 1.3 per million units of blood or blood products infused.192 Reactions to these blood products have also been described in CVID, and can be clinically indistinguishable from anaphylaxis.189,193,194 AntiIgA antibodies are more common in IgA-deficient individuals with undetectable IgA, but may occasionally occur when the IgA level is 10 mg/dl or higher. Ferreira and associates found that 39% of their IgA-deficient patients had anti-IgA antibodies195; 22% of those in the antibodypositive group had IgA levels between 1.1 and 5 mg/dl, and the remaining 78% had IgA levels lower than 1.1 mg/ dl. Anti-IgA antibodies are usually of the IgG1 class,196 and are more common in IgA-deficient subjects who are also IgG2 deficient.195,197 Anti-IgA antibodies may be of the IgE isotype, leading to true anaphylactic reactions115; however, the actual incidence of such antibodies is unknown, and some studies have not found them.187 Because IgA-deficient and IgG2-deficient individuals often have poor but not absent antibody responses and may require immunoglobulin treatment57 they may be at particular risk for infusion reactions, because immunoglobulin treatments contain varying amounts of IgA. IgAdepleted preparations are available and are usually well tolerated, even in patients with high titers of anti-IgA antibodies.197 Eijkhout et al. demonstrated that side effects due to anti-IgA antibodies were not observed when human immunoglobulin was given by subcutaneous infusion.198 In some patients, antibodies disappeared and therapy could be changed to intravenous Ig administration. It should be noted that there are also other factors which might influence the association of adverse reactions with anti-IgA antibodies, including the serum concentration and isotype (IgG or IgE) of the anti-IgA antibody, its specificity (class or subclass specific), the method of measurement, and the IgA content of the gammaglobulin infusion and its route of administration, which would make the role of anti-IgA antibodies in causing anaphylaxis in sIgAD received immunoglobulin treatment controversial.80
Diagnostics When IgA deficiency is identified in a healthy person with no significant medical history, no further evaluation is needed. Usually, quantitative immunoglobulins have been ordered because a significant clinical problem has emerged. In these cases, especially when significant infections have been present, IgG subclass levels should
401
be performed. A combined IgA IgG2 subclass-deficient patient may have a normal IgG levels because of an elevation of other IgG subclasses; such individuals may have a history of serious or even life-threatening illness. Many of these patients may not respond to vaccination with pneumococcal polysaccharides. For these patients Ig replacement is sometimes indicated, but anti-IgA antibodies can be present in such patients. Whether anti-IgA antibodies should be determined in all IgA-deficient patients is debatable. Although anti-IgA antibodies can produce serious anaphylactic reactions if blood or blood products (including Ig) are infused, the likelihood of such a reaction is low. Some IgA-deficient patients have persistent allergic symptoms. An allergic evaluation, including skin and or radioallergosorbent testing, may be indicated. Serum immunoglobulin levels on family members to ascertain the inheritance pattern, although of scientific interest, are not usually indicated unless a family member has symptoms. Similarly, HLA typing in patients or their families, except for research purposes, is not indicated unless a family member has symptoms. IgA-deficient patients with certain HLA types are not more likely to have specific medical problems. Quantitation of IgA1 and IgA2 levels in the partially IgA-deficient patient is difficult and expensive, and not informative. Although there is an association between IgA deficiency and autoimmune disease, the likelihood of an autoimmune disease developing in an individual IgA-deficient patient is probably low. Thus, extensive screening for autoantibodies is not indicated in the asymptomatic IgAdeficient patient.
Management There is no specific treatment for IgA deficiency because there are no drugs that activate IgA-producing B cells. A preliminary ex vivo study demonstrates an initial basis for a potential therapeutic role of IL-21 to reconstitute Ig production.199 Intermittent or continuous prophylactic antibiotics may be helpful in patients with recurrent respiratory tract infections, particularly those with chronic asthma, bronchitis, or sinusitis. For the IgA-deficient individual with concomitant IgG2 subclass deficiency, or impaired antibody responses to bacterial or vaccine antigens, immunoglobulin replacement may be warranted, especially when lung damage is present or recurrent infections are prominent.71 Ig replacement in the usual therapeutic doses (300 400 mg/kg body weight, every 3 to 4 weeks) is indicated. In some cases, one might elect to use a product low in IgA to decrease the risk of sensitization, but the utility of this is unknown. Subcutaneous infusions of immunoglobulin can
402
also be used safely under these circumstances.198,200 Transfusions with other blood products containing IgA (whole blood, red blood cells, platelets, fresh frozen plasma, cryoprecipitate, or granulocytes) may sensitize the selective IgA-deficient patient, or may cause an anaphylactic reaction in a sensitized patient with anti-IgA antibodies.201 Lactose intolerance is not uncommon in sIgAD, and milk should be avoided in lactose-intolerant IgA-deficient patients. IgA-deficient subjects with milk precipitins are not instructed to avoid milk, because there is no clear association with disease. Management of Secondary Complications Associated diseases in sIgAD are treated conventionally using standard therapies, and the results in most cases are the same as in non-immunodeficient patients.
Prognosis SIgAD in children usually persists,97,164 whereas partial IgAD in children may resolve over time.163,166 SIgAD can progress to common variable immunodeficiency, which tends to occur in adolescence or young adulthood.202,203 The prognosis of sIgAD diagnosed in adulthood has not been well studied.
Selective IgM Deficiency Definition Selective IgM deficiency is an isolated absence or profound deficiency of serum IgM associated with infections, atopic manifestations, autoimmunity, or malignant conditions, but it may also be asymptomatic. There are no other underlying immunodeficiencies. Serum IgM levels are less than 10 15 mg/dl in infants and children and less than 20 30 mg/dl in adults. Other immunoglobulin levels and T cell immunity are usually normal.
Genetics No genetic or molecular basis has been established as a cause of selective IgM deficiency.
Pathogenesis Considering the ontogeny of B cell maturation, the selective absence of IgM is difficult to explain, particularly because most patients studied have normal numbers of circulating surface IgM1 B cells and normal serum levels of IgG and IgA, which is indicative for normal B cell responses. Over the past 20 years, several in vivo and in vitro immunologic, phenotypic, and functional studies have been published, sometimes with conflicting results; these are summarized by Goldstein et al.204 and Yel et al.205 In vitro studies have
PART | 2
Primary Immune Deficiencies
identified B cell defects characterized by inability of B cell differentiation into IgM secreting cells206 208 with a failure of secreted Igμ messenger RNA synthesis.209 Mutations or deletions have not been observed in the IGHM gene, including the region encoding the secretory domain of IgM.210 Other studies showed that patients’ IgM-positive B cells produced normal amounts of IgM in vitro when cultured with normal T cells, whereas patients’ T cells demonstrated decreased helper activity for IgM, but also for IgG and IgA production, which would favor a defect in T-helper cell function.211 There was no indication for suppressor T cell defects that would selectively interfere with IgM synthesis.211 Some mitogen- and antigen-stimulated B cell proliferation assays show normal IgM response whilst others show a decreased response (reviewed by Goldstein et al.204).
Clinical Presentation The prevalence of selective IgM deficiency is 0.03 1% of the population.212 Between 60% and 80% of patients suffer from recurrent bacterial and viral infections. Common presentations include otitis media, bronchitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, pneumonia, and sepsis.204 Selective IgM deficiency may also be asymptomatic. Allergic disorders are also common manifestations, with presenting features such as asthma and allergic rhinitis.205,212 The association of selective IgM deficiency and atopy has already been described in earlier reports.123 Idiopathic anaphylaxis and idiopathic angioedema have been reported in a patient cohort gathered from an allergy and immunology practice.212 Autoimmune diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus,213 Hashimoto thyroiditis,214 idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura,215 autoimmune glomerulonephritis,215 liver cirrhosis from autoimmune hepatitis,216 and rheumatoid arthritis have been associated with selective IgM deficiency. Individual cases of malignancies i.e. sarcoma,217 lymphoma,205 and plasmacytoma have also been reported, but studies with larger samples are required to determine whether selective IgM deficient patients are really at risk of a malignancy (Goldstein et al., 2006).212 Other Causes of Decreased Serum IgM Other causes of decreased levels of serum IgM (i.e., secondary IgM deficiency) are episodes of infection, thymic hypoplasia, celiac disease, autoimmune disease, and certain adult malignancies; and other PIDs (Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, DOCK8 deficiency, ataxia-telangiectasia, CVID, and XLA, in combination with IgG and IgA, transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy), and congenital disorders (Bloom syndrome and Russell-Silver syndrome).204 Primary selective IgM deficiency is less common than secondary immunodeficiency.
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
403
Diagnostics Laboratory studies disclose selective IgM deficiency (,20 30 mg/dl in adults, and ,10 15 mg/dl in infants and children), when measured at least twice on separate occasions. Antibody responses to vaccination can be variable but are usually normal. Antibody responses to diphtheria, tetanus, and pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccines can be reduced despite normal serum IgG levels.218 Numbers of peripheral B cells, including IgM 1 B cells, are normal. Most, but not all, patients have normal T cell numbers and function.219 The clinical history should be explored for the presence of associated conditions, as these may ultimately explain the low levels of IgM.
Management Selective IgM patients are managed in the same fashion as for other antibody deficiencies. Ig replacement would only be given if there were a significant associated antibody deficiency. Prophylactic antibiotics and prompt treatment of febrile illness are crucial. Vaccines, particularly pneumococcal and meningococcal vaccines, should be given if there is some antibody responsiveness, and the post-vaccine response assessed.
10.
11.
12.
13. 14.
15.
16.
17.
Prognosis In some infants, selective IgM deficiency may be transient.220 For other patients insufficient data are available for a prognosis.
18.
19.
REFERENCES 1. Snyder JG, Dinh Q, Morrison SL, et al. Structure function studies of anti-3-fucosyllactosamine (Le(x)) and galactosylgloboside antibodies. J Immunol 1994;153(3):1161 70. 2. Murphy K. Janeway’s Immunology. 8th ed. Oxford, UK: Garland Science; 2012. 3. Ghetie V, Ward ES. Multiple roles for the major histocompatibility complex class I-related receptor FcRn. Annu Rev Immunol 2000;18:739 66. 4. Simister NE, Story CM. Human placental Fc receptors and the transmission of antibodies from mother to fetus. J Reprod Immunol 1997;37(1):1 23. 5. Roopenian DC, Akilesh S. FcRn: the neonatal Fc receptor comes of age. Nat Rev Immunol 2007;7(9):715 25. 6. Siber GR, Schur PH, Aisenberg AC, et al. Correlation between serum IgG-2 concentrations and the antibody response to bacterial polysaccharide antigens. N Engl J Med 1980;303(4):178 82. 7. Freijd A, Hammarstrom L, Persson MA, et al. Plasma antipneumococcal antibody activity of the IgG class and subclasses in otitis prone children. Clin Exp Immunol 1984;56(2):233 8. 8. Hammarstrom L, Smith CI. IgG subclasses in bacterial infections. Monogr Allergy 1986;19:122 33. 9. Stevens R, Dichek D, Keld B, et al. IgG1 is the predominant subclass of in vivo- and in vitro-produced anti-tetanus toxoid
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
antibodies and also serves as the membrane IgG molecule for delivering inhibitory signals to anti-tetanus toxoid antibodyproducing B cells. J Clin Immunol 1983;3(1):65 9. Iskander R, Das PK, Aalberse RC. IgG4 antibodies in Egyptian patients with schistosomiasis. Int Arch Allergy Appl Immunol 1981;66(2):200 7. Ottesen EA, Skvaril F, Tripathy SP, et al. Prominence of IgG4 in the IgG antibody response to human filariasis. J Immunol 1985;134 (4):2707 12. Al-Herz W, Bousfiha A, Casanova JL, et al. Primary immunodeficiency diseases: an update on the classification from the International Union of Immunological Societies Expert Committee for Primary Immunodeficiency. Front Immunol 2011;2:54. Notarangelo LD, Fischer A, Geha RS, et al. Primary immunodeficiencies: 2009 update. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2009;124(6):1161 78. van Zelm MC, Geertsema C, Nieuwenhuis N, et al. Gross deletions involving IGHM, BTK, or Artemis: a model for genomic lesions mediated by transposable elements. Am J Hum Genet 2008;82 (2):320 32. Yel L, Minegishi Y, Coustan-Smith E, et al. Mutations in the mu heavy-chain gene in patients with agammaglobulinemia. N Engl J Med 1996;335(20):1486 93. Lefranc G, Lefranc MP, Helal AN, et al. Unusual heavy chains of human IgG immunoglobulins: rearrangements of the CH domain exons. J Immunogenet 1982;9(1):1 9. Bottaro A, de Marchi M, Migone N, et al. Pulsed-field gel analysis of human immunoglobulin heavy-chain constant region gene deletions reveals the extent of unmapped regions within the locus. Genomics 1989;4(4):505 8. Lefranc MP, Hammarstrom L, Smith CI, et al. Gene deletions in the human immunoglobulin heavy chain constant region locus: molecular and immunological analysis. Immunodefic Rev 1991;2 (4):265 81. Olsson PG, Hofker MH, Walter MA, et al. Ig H chain variable and C region genes in common variable immunodeficiency. Characterization of two new deletion haplotypes. J Immunol 1991;147(8):2540 6. van der Burg M, Barendregt BH, van Gastel-Mol EJ, et al. Unraveling of the polymorphic C lambda 2-C lambda 3 amplification and the Ke1 Oz2 polymorphism in the human Ig lambda locus. J Immunol 2002;169(1):271 6. van Zelm MC, van der Burg M, de Ridder D, et al. Ig gene rearrangement steps are initiated in early human precursor B cell subsets and correlate with specific transcription factor expression. J Immunol 2005;175(9):5912 22. van der Burg M, Tumkaya T, Boerma M, et al. Ordered recombination of immunoglobulin light chain genes occurs at the IGK locus but seems less strict at the IGL locus. Blood 2001;97(4):1001 8. Langman RE, Cohn M. The proportion of B-cell subsets expressing kappa and lambda light chains changes following antigenic selection. Immunol Today 1995;16(3):141 4. Zegers BJ, Maertzdorf WJ, Van Loghem E, et al. Kappa-chain deficiency. An immunoglobulin disorder. N Engl J Med 1976;294 (19):1026 30. Stavnezer-Nordgren J, Kekish O, Zegers BJ. Molecular defects in a human immunoglobulin kappa chain deficiency. Science 1985;230 (4724):458 61. Los FJ, Van Hemel JO, Jacobs HJ, et al. De novo deletion (2) (p11.2p13): clinical, cytogenetic, and immunological data. J Med Genet 1994;31(1):72 3.
404
27. Bernier GM, Gunderman JR, Ruymann FB. Kappa-chain deficiency. Blood 1972;40(6):795 805. 28. Barandun S, Morell A, Skvaril F, et al. Deficiency of kappa- or lambda-type immunoglobulins. Blood 1976;47(1):79 89. 29. Herrod HG. Management of the patient with IgG subclass deficiency and/or selective antibody deficiency. Ann Allergy 1993;70 (1):3 8. 30. Pan Q, Hammarstrom L. Molecular basis of IgG subclass deficiency. Immunol Rev 2000;178:99 110. 31. Stavnezer-Nordgren J, Sirlin S. Specificity of immunoglobulin heavy chain switch correlates with activity of germline heavy chain genes prior to switching. EMBO J 1986;5(1):95 102. 32. Kondo N, Inoue R, Kasahara K, et al. Reduced expression of the interferon-gamma messenger RNA in IgG2 deficiency. Scand J Immunol 1997;45(2):227 30. 33. Buckley RH. Immunoglobulin G subclass deficiency: fact or fancy? Curr Allergy Asthma Rep 2002;2(5):356 60. 34. Morell A. Clinical relevance of IgG subclass deficiencies. Ann Biol Clin (Paris) 1994;52(1):49 52. 35. Soderstrom T, Soderstrom R, Avanzini A, et al. Determination of normal IgG subclass levels. In: Levinsky RJ, editor. IgG Subclass Deficiencies. London: Royal Society of Medicine; 1989. pp. 13 26. 36. Bass JL, Nuss R, Mehta KA, et al. Recurrent meningococcemia associated with IgG2-subclass deficiency. N Engl J Med 1983;309 (7):430. 37. Ohga S, Okada K, Asahi T, et al. Recurrent pneumococcal meningitis in a patient with transient IgG subclass deficiency. Acta Paediatr Jpn 1995;37(2):196 200. 38. O’Keefe S, Finnegan P. IgG subclass deficiency. Chest 1993;104 (6):1940. 39. Geha RS. IgG antibody response to polysaccharides in children with recurrent infections. Monogr Allergy 1988;23:97 102. 40. Insel RA, Anderson PW. Response to oligosaccharide-protein conjugate vaccine against Haemophilus influenzae b in two patients with IgG2 deficiency unresponsive to capsular polysaccharide vaccine. N Engl J Med 1986;315(8):499 503. 41. Umetsu DT, Ambrosino DM, Quinti I, et al. Recurrent sinopulmonary infection and impaired antibody response to bacterial capsular polysaccharide antigen in children with selective IgG-subclass deficiency. N Engl J Med 1985;313(20):1247 51. 42. Shackelford PG, Polmar SH, Mayus JL, et al. Spectrum of IgG2 subclass deficiency in children with recurrent infections: prospective study. J Pediatr 1986;108(5 Pt 1):647 53. 43. Shackelford PG, Granoff DM, Madassery JV, et al. Clinical and immunologic characteristics of healthy children with subnormal serum concentrations of IgG2. Pediatr Res 1990;27(1):16 21. 44. Shackelford PG, Granoff DM, Polmar SH, et al. Subnormal serum concentrations of IgG2 in children with frequent infections associated with varied patterns of immunologic dysfunction. J Pediatr 1990;116(4):529 38. 45. Avanzini MA, Bjorkander J, Soderstrom R, et al. Qualitative and quantitative analyses of the antibody response elicited by Haemophilus influenzae type b capsular polysaccharide-tetanus toxoid conjugates in adults with IgG subclass deficiencies and frequent infections. Clin Exp Immunol 1994;96(1):54 8. 46. Meyts I, Bossuyt X, Proesmans M, et al. Isolated IgG3 deficiency in children: to treat or not to treat? Case presentation and review of the literature. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2006;17(7):544 50.
PART | 2
Primary Immune Deficiencies
47. Visitsunthorn N, Hengcrawit W, Jirapongsananuruk O, et al. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) subclass deficiency in Thai children. Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 2011;29(4):332 7. 48. Karaca NE, Karadeniz C, Aksu G, et al. Clinical and laboratory evaluation of periodically monitored Turkish children with IgG subclass deficiencies. Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol 2009;27(1):43 8. 49. Walker L, Johnson GD, MacLennan IC. The IgG subclass responses of human lymphocytes to B-cell activators. Immunology 1983;50(2):269 72. 50. de Moraes Lui C, Oliveira LC, Diogo CL, et al. Immunoglobulin G subclass concentrations and infections in children and adolescents with severe asthma. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2002;13(3):195 202. 51. Shackelford PG. IgG subclasses: importance in pediatric practice. Pediatr Rev 1993;14(8):291 6. 52. Armenaka M, Grizzanti J, Rosenstreich DL. Serum immunoglobulins and IgG subclass levels in adults with chronic sinusitis: evidence for decreased IgG3 levels. Ann Allergy 1994;72(6):507 14. 53. Barlan IB, Geha RS, Schneider LC. Therapy for patients with recurrent infections and low serum IgG3 levels. J Allergy Clin Immunol 1993;92(2):353 5. 54. Shapiro GG, Virant FS, Furukawa CT, et al. Immunologic defects in patients with refractory sinusitis. Pediatrics 1991;87(3):311 16. 55. Ones U, Guler N, Somer A, et al. Low immunoglobulin G3 levels in wheezy children. Acta Paediatr 1998;87(4):368 70. 56. Oxelius VA, Laurell AB, Lindquist B, et al. IgG subclasses in selective IgA deficiency: importance of IgG2-IgA deficiency. N Engl J Med 1981;304(24):1476 7. 57. Snowden JA, Milford-Ward A, Cookson LJ, et al. Recurrent lymphocytic meningitis associated with hereditary isolated IgG subclass 3 deficiency. J Infect 1993;27(3):285 9. 58. Loh RK, Thong YH, Ferrante A. Immunoglobulin G subclass deficiency in children with high levels of immunoglobulin E and infection proneness. Int Arch Allergy Appl Immunol 1990;93(4):285 8. 59. Marsman WA, Sukhai RN. Recurrent parotitis and isolated IgG3 subclass deficiency. Eur J Pediatr 1999;158(8):684. 60. Beck CS, Heiner DC. Selective immunoglobulin G4 deficiency and recurrent infections of the respiratory tract. Am Rev Respir Dis 1981;124(1):94 6. 61. Heiner DC, Myers A, Beck CS. Deficiency of IgG4: a disorder associated with frequent infections and bronchiectasis that may be familial. Clin Rev Allergy 1983;1(2):259 66. 62. Moss RB, Carmack MA, Esrig S. Deficiency of IgG4 in children: association of isolated IgG4 deficiency with recurrent respiratory tract infection. J Pediatr 1992;120(1):16 21. 63. Hill SL, Mitchell JL, Burnett D, et al. IgG subclasses in the serum and sputum from patients with bronchiectasis. Thorax 1998;53 (6):463 8. 64. Merrill WW, Naegel GP, Olchowski JJ, et al. Immunoglobulin G subclass proteins in serum and lavage fluid of normal subjects. Quantitation and comparison with immunoglobulins A and E. Am Rev Respir Dis 1985;131(4):584 7. 65. French MA, Denis KA, Dawkins R, et al. Severity of infections in IgA deficiency: correlation with decreased serum antibodies to pneumococcal polysaccharides and decreased serum IgG2 and/or IgG4. Clin Exp Immunol 1995;100(1):47 53. 66. Kalfa VC, Roberts RL, Stiehm ER. The syndrome of chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis with selective antibody deficiency. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2003;90(2):259 64.
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
67. Anneren G, Magnusson CG, Lilja G, et al. Abnormal serum IgG subclass pattern in children with Down’s syndrome. Arch Dis Child 1992;67(5):628 31. 68. Wilson NW, Daaboul J, Bastian JF. Association of autoimmunity with IgG2 and IgG4 subclass deficiency in a growth hormonedeficient child. J Clin Immunol 1990;10(6):330 4. 69. Maguire GA, Kumararatne DS, Joyce HJ. Are there any clinical indications for measuring IgG subclasses? Ann Clin Biochem 2002;39(Pt 4):374 7. 70. Lawton AR. IgG subclass deficiency and the day-care generation. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1999;18(5):462 6. 71. Gelfand EW, Ochs HD, Shearer WT. Controversies in IgG replacement therapy in patients with antibody deficiency diseases. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2013;131(4):1001 5. 72. Chapel HM, Spickett GP, Ericson D, et al. The comparison of the efficacy and safety of intravenous versus subcutaneous immunoglobulin replacement therapy. J Clin Immunol 2000;20(2):94 100. 73. Koistinen J. Familial clustering of selective IgA deficiency. Vox Sang 1976;30(3):181 90. 74. Vorechovsky I, Webster AD, Plebani A, et al. Genetic linkage of IgA deficiency to the major histocompatibility complex: evidence for allele segregation distortion, parent-of-origin penetrance differences, and the role of anti-IgA antibodies in disease predisposition. Am J Hum Genet 1999;64(4):1096 109. 75. Vorechovsky I, Zetterquist H, Paganelli R, et al. Family and linkage study of selective IgA deficiency and common variable immunodeficiency. Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1995;77 (2):185 92. 76. Castigli E, Wilson SA, Garibyan L, et al. TACI is mutant in common variable immunodeficiency and IgA deficiency. Nat Genet 2005;37(8):829 34. 77. Salzer U, Chapel HM, Webster AD, et al. Mutations in TNFRSF13B encoding TACI are associated with common variable immunodeficiency in humans. Nat Genet 2005;37(8):820 8. 78. Pan-Hammarstrom Q, Salzer U, Du L, et al. Reexamining the role of TACI coding variants in common variable immunodeficiency and selective IgA deficiency. Nat Genet 2007;39(4):429 30. 79. Castigli E, Wilson S, Garibyan L, et al. Reexamining the role of TACI coding variants in common variable immunodeficiency and selective IgA deficiency. Nat Genet 2007;39(4):430 1. 80. Rachid R, Bonilla FA. The role of anti-IgA antibodies in causing adverse reactions to gamma globulin infusion in immunodeficient patients: a comprehensive review of the literature. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2012;129(3):628 34. 81. Lakhanpal S, O’Duffy JD, Homburger HA, et al. Evidence for linkage of IgA deficiency with the major histocompatibility complex. Mayo Clin Proc 1988;63(5):461 5. 82. Yel L. Selective IgA deficiency. J Clin Immunol 2010;30(1):10 16. 83. Mohammadi J, Ramanujam R, Jarefors S, et al. IgA deficiency and the MHC: assessment of relative risk and microheterogeneity within the HLA A1 B8, DR3 (8.1) haplotype. J Clin Immunol 2010;30(1):138 43. 84. Ferreira RC, Pan-Hammarstrom Q, Graham RR, et al. Highdensity SNP mapping of the HLA region identifies multiple independent susceptibility loci associated with selective IgA deficiency. PLoS Genet 2012;8(1):e1002476. 85. Wang N, Hammarstrom L. IgA deficiency: what is new? Curr Opin Allergy Clin Immunol 2012;12(6):602 8.
405
86. Ferreira RC, Pan-Hammarstrom Q, Graham RR, et al. Association of IFIH1 and other autoimmunity risk alleles with selective IgA deficiency. Nat Genet 2010;42(9):777 80. 87. Liu S, Wang H, Jin Y, et al. IFIH1 polymorphisms are significantly associated with type 1 diabetes and IFIH1 gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Hum Mol Genet 2009;18 (2):358 65. 88. Nejentsev S, Walker N, Riches D, et al. Rare variants of IFIH1, a gene implicated in antiviral responses, protect against type 1 diabetes. Science 2009;324(5925):387 9. 89. International Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Consortium. The expanding genetic overlap between multiple sclerosis and type I diabetes. Genes Immun 2009;10(1):11 14. 90. Nechvatalova J, Pikulova Z, Stikarovska D, et al. B-lymphocyte subpopulations in patients with selective IgA deficiency. J Clin Immunol 2012;32(3):441 8. 91. Aghamohammadi A, Abolhassani H, Biglari M, et al. Analysis of switched memory B cells in patients with IgA deficiency. Int Arch Allergy Immunol 2011;156(4):462 8. 92. Hummelshoj L, Ryder LP, Nielsen LK, et al. Class switch recombination in selective IgA-deficient subjects. Clin Exp Immunol 2006;144(3):458 66. 93. McGhee JR, Mestecky J, Elson CO, et al. Regulation of IgA synthesis and immune response by T cells and interleukins. J Clin Immunol 1989;9(3):175 99. 94. Wang Z, Yunis D, Irigoyen M, et al. Discordance between IgA switching at the DNA level and IgA expression at the mRNA level in IgA-deficient patients. Clin Immunol 1999;91(3):263 70. 95. Thieffry S, Arthuis M, Aicardi J, et al. Ataxiatelangiectasis (7 personal cases). Rev Neurol (Paris) 1961;105:390 405. 96. Latiff AH, Kerr MA. The clinical significance of immunoglobulin A deficiency. Ann Clin Biochem 2007;44(Pt 2):131 9. 97. Aytekin C, Tuygun N, Gokce S, et al. Selective IgA deficiency: clinical and laboratory features of 118 children in Turkey. J Clin Immunol 2012;32(5):961 6. 98. Shkalim V, Monselize Y, Segal N, et al. Selective IgA deficiency in children in Israel. J Clin Immunol 2010;30(5):761 5. 99. Jorgensen GH, Gardulf A, Sigurdsson MI, et al. Clinical Symptoms in Adults with Selective IgA Deficiency: a Case Control Study. J Clin Immunol 2013;33(4):742. 100. Pan-Hammarstrom Q, Hammarstrom L. Antibody deficiency diseases. Eur J Immunol 2008;38(2):327 33. 101. Pereira LF, Sapina AM, Arroyo J, et al. Prevalence of selective IgA deficiency in Spain: more than we thought. Blood 1997;90(2):893. 102. Kanoh T, Mizumoto T, Yasuda N, et al. Selective IgA deficiency in Japanese blood donors: frequency and statistical analysis. Vox Sang 1986;50(2):81 6. 103. Koistinen J. Selective IgA deficiency in blood donors. Vox Sang 1975;29(3):192 202. 104. Buckley RH. Clinical and immunologic features of selective IgA deficiency. Birth Defects Orig Artic Ser 1975;11(1):134 42. 105. Oen K, Petty RE, Schroeder ML. Immunoglobulin A deficiency: genetic studies. Tissue Antigens 1982;19(3):174 82. 106. Vorechovsky I, Cullen M, Carrington M, et al. Fine mapping of IGAD1 in IgA deficiency and common variable immunodeficiency: identification and characterization of haplotypes shared by affected members of 101 multiple-case families. J Immunol 2000;164(8):4408 16.
406
107. Petty RE, Sherry DD, Johannson J. Anti-IgA antibodies in pregnancy. N Engl J Med 1985;313(26):1620 5. 108. Brandtzaeg P, Karlsson G, Hansson G, et al. The clinical condition of IgA-deficient patients is related to the proportion of IgDand IgM-producing cells in their nasal mucosa. Clin Exp Immunol 1987;67(3):626 36. 109. Barros MD, Porto MH, Leser PG, et al. Study of colostrum of a patient with selective IgA deficiency. Allergol Immunopathol (Madr) 1985;13(4):331 4. 110. Arnold RR, Cole MF, Prince S, et al. Secretory IgM antibodies to Streptococcus mutans in subjects with selective IgA deficiency. Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1977;8(3):475 86. 111. Norhagen G, Engstrom PE, Hammarstrom L, et al. Immunoglobulin levels in saliva in individuals with selective IgA deficiency: compensatory IgM secretion and its correlation with HLA and susceptibility to infections. J Clin Immunol 1989;9(4):279 86. 112. Mellander L, Bjorkander J, Carlsson B, et al. Secretory antibodies in IgA-deficient and immunosuppressed individuals. J Clin Immunol 1986;6(4):284 91. 113. Nilssen DE, Friman V, Theman K, et al. B-cell activation in duodenal mucosa after oral cholera vaccination in IgA deficient subjects with or without IgG subclass deficiency. Scand J Immunol 1993;38(2):201 8. 114. Ammann AJ, Hong R. Anti-antiserum antibody as a cause of double precipitin rings in immunoglobulin quantitation and its relation to milk precipitins. J Immunol 1971;106(2):567 9. 115. Burks Jr AW, Steele RW. Selective IgA deficiency. Ann Allergy 1986;57(1):3 13. 116. Cunningham-Rundles C. Genetic aspects of immunoglobulin A deficiency. Adv Hum Genet 1990;19:235 66. 117. Schaffer FM, Monteiro RC, Volanakis JE, et al. IgA deficiency. Immunodefic Rev 1991;3(1):15 44. 118. Strober W, Sneller MC. IgA deficiency. Ann Allergy 1991;66 (5):363 75. 119. Sharma OP, Chandor SM. IgA deficiency in sarcoidosis. A case report. Am Rev Respir Dis 1972;106(4):600 3. 120. Webb DR, Condemi JJ. Selective immunoglobulin A deficiency and chronic obstructive lung disease. A family study. Ann Intern Med 1974;80(5):618 21. 121. Chipps BE, Talamo RC, Winkelstein JA. IgA deficiency, recurrent pneumonias, and bronchiectasis. Chest 1978;73(4):519 26. 122. Gomez-Carrasco JA, Barrera-Gomez MJ, Garcia-Mourino V, et al. Selective and partial IgA deficiency in an adolescent male with bronchiectasis. Allergol Immunopathol (Madr) 1994;22(6):261 3. 123. Kaufman HS, Hobbs JR. Immunoglobulin deficiencies in an atopic population. Lancet 1970;2(7682):1061 3. 124. Janzi M, Kull I, Sjoberg R, et al. Selective IgA deficiency in early life: association to infections and allergic diseases during childhood. Clin Immunol 2009;133(1):78 85. 125. Ammann AJ, Hong R. Selective IgA deficiency: presentation of 30 cases and a review of the literature. Medicine (Baltimore) 1971;50(3):223 36. 126. Plebani A, Monafo V, Ugazio AG, et al. Comparison of the frequency of atopic diseases in children with severe and partial IgA deficiency. Int Arch Allergy Appl Immunol 1987;82(3-4):485 6. 127. Franco A, Parrella R, Murru F, et al. Lack of association between IgA deficiency and respiratory atopy in young male adults. In Vivo 2011;25(5):829 32.
PART | 2
Primary Immune Deficiencies
128. Langford TD, Housley MP, Boes M, et al. Central importance of immunoglobulin A in host defense against Giardia spp. Infect Immun 2002;70(1):11 18. 129. Eren M, Saltik-Temizel IN, Yuce A, et al. Duodenal appearance of giardiasis in a child with selective immunoglobulin A deficiency. Pediatr Int 2007;49(3):409 11. 130. Fisher CH, Oh KS, Bayless TM, et al. Current perspectives on giardiasis. Am J Roentgenol Radium Ther Nucl Med 1975;125 (1):207 17. 131. Zinneman HH, Kaplan AP. The association of giardiasis with reduced intestinal secretory immunoglobulin A. Am J Dig Dis 1972;17(9):793 7. 132. Cataldo F, Marino V, Ventura A, et al. Prevalence and clinical features of selective immunoglobulin A deficiency in coeliac disease: an Italian multicentre study. Italian Society of Paediatric Gastroenterology and Hepatology (SIGEP) and “Club del Tenue” Working Groups on Coeliac Disease. Gut 1998;42 (3):362 5. 133. Wang N, Shen N, Vyse TJ, et al. Selective IgA deficiency in autoimmune diseases. Mol Med 2011;17(11 12):1383 96. 134. Chow MA, Lebwohl B, Reilly NR, et al. Immunoglobulin A deficiency in celiac disease. J Clin Gastroenterol 2012;46(10):850 4. 135. Prince HE, Norman GL, Binder WL. Immunoglobulin A (IgA) deficiency and alternative celiac disease-associated antibodies in sera submitted to a reference laboratory for endomysial IgA testing. Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 2000;7(2):192 6. 136. Korponay-Szabo IR, Dahlbom I, Laurila K, et al. Elevation of IgG antibodies against tissue transglutaminase as a diagnostic tool for coeliac disease in selective IgA deficiency. Gut 2003;52 (11):1567 71. 137. Lenhardt A, Plebani A, Marchetti F, et al. Role of human-tissue transglutaminase IgG and anti-gliadin IgG antibodies in the diagnosis of coeliac disease in patients with selective immunoglobulin A deficiency. Dig Liver Dis 2004;36(11):730 4. 138. Villalta D, Alessio MG, Tampoia M, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of IgA anti-tissue transglutaminase antibody assays in celiac disease patients with selective IgA deficiency. Ann NY Acad Sci 2007;1109:212 20. 139. Harrison E, Li KK, Petchey M, et al. Selective measurement of anti-tTG antibodies in coeliac disease and IgA deficiency: an alternative pathway. Postgrad Med J 2013;89(1047):4 7. 140. Klemola T. Immunohistochemical findings in the intestine of IgA-deficient persons: number of intraepithelial T lymphocytes is increased. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 1988;7(4):537 43. 141. Agarwal S, Mayer L. Pathogenesis and treatment of gastrointestinal disease in antibody deficiency syndromes. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2009;124(4):658 64. 142. Asada Y, Isomoto H, Shikuwa S, et al. Development of ulcerative colitis during the course of rheumatoid arthritis: Association with selective IgA deficiency. World J Gastroenterol 2006;12 (32):5240 3. 143. Manfredi R, Coronado OV, Marinacci G, et al. Crohn’s disease, rare association with selective IgA immunodeficiency, and development of life-threatening bacterial infections. Scand J Infect Dis 2004;36(6 7):523 4. 144. Iizuka M, Itou H, Sato M, et al. Crohn’s disease associated with selective immunoglobulin a deficiency. J Gastroenterol Hepatol 2001;16(8):951 2.
Chapter | 16
Isotype Defects
145. Joo M, Shim SH, Chang SH, et al. Nodular lymphoid hyperplasia and histologic changes mimicking celiac disease, collagenous sprue, and lymphocytic colitis in a patient with selective IgA deficiency. Pathol Res Pract 2009;205(12):876 80. 146. Piascik M, Rydzewska G, Pawlik M, et al. Diffuse nodular lymphoid hyperplasia of the gastrointestinal tract in patient with selective immunoglobulin A deficiency and sarcoid-like syndrome case report. Adv Med Sci 2007;52:296 300. 147. Jacobson KW, deShazo RD. Selective immunoglobulin A deficiency associated with modular lymphoid hyperplasia. J Allergy Clin Immunol 1979;64(6 Pt 1):516 21. 148. Benbassat J, Keren L, Zlotnic A. Hepatitis in selective IgA deficiency. Br Med J 1973;4(5895):762 3. 149. James SP, Jones EA, Schafer DF, et al. Selective immunoglobulin A deficiency associated with primary biliary cirrhosis in a family with liver disease. Gastroenterology 1986;90(2):283 8. 150. Odgers RJ, Wangel AG. Abnormalities in IgA-containing mononuclear cells in the gastric lesion of pernicious anaemia. Lancet 1968;2(7573):846 9. 151. Barka N, Shen GQ, Shoenfeld Y, et al. Multireactive pattern of serum autoantibodies in asymptomatic individuals with immunoglobulin A deficiency. Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 1995;2(4):469 72. 152. Gulez N, Karaca NE, Aksu G, et al. Increased percentages of autoantibodies in immunoglobulin A-deficient children do not correlate with clinical manifestations. Autoimmunity 2009;42(1):74 9. 153. Yewdall V, Cameron JS, Nathan AW, et al. Systemic lupus erythematosus and IgA deficiency. J Clin Lab Immunol 1983;10 (1):13 18. 154. Rankin EC, Isenberg DA. IgA deficiency and SLE: prevalence in a clinic population and a review of the literature. Lupus 1997;6 (4):390 4. 155. Jesus AA, Liphaus BL, Silva CA, et al. Complement and antibody primary immunodeficiency in juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus patients. Lupus 2011;20(12):1275 84. 156. Pelkonen P, Savilahti E, Makela AL. Persistent and transient IgA deficiency in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Scand J Rheumatol 1983;12(3):273 9. 157. Moradinejad MH, Rafati AH, Ardalan M, et al. Prevalence of IgA deficiency in children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Iran J Allergy Asthma Immunol 2011;10(1):35 40. 158. Badcock LJ, Clarke S, Jones PW, et al. Abnormal IgA levels in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Ann Rheum Dis 2003;62 (1):83 4. 159. Jorgensen GH, Thorsteinsdottir I, Gudmundsson S, et al. Familial aggregation of IgAD and autoimmunity. Clin Immunol 2009;131 (2):233 9. 160. Sayarifard F, Aghamohammadi A, Haghi-Ashtiani MT, et al. Evaluation of serum IgA levels in Iranian patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus. Acta Diabetol 2012;49(2):131 5. 161. Kersey JH, Shapiro RS, Filipovich AH. Relationship of immunodeficiency to lymphoid malignancy. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1988;7 (Suppl. 5):S10 12. 162. Koskinen S, Tolo H, Hirvonen M, et al. Long-term persistence of selective IgA deficiency in healthy adults. J Clin Immunol 1994;14(2):116 19. 163. Blum PM, Hong R, Stiehm ER. Spontaneous recovery of selective IgA deficiency. Additional case reports and a review. Clin Pediatr (Phila) 1982;21(2):77 80.
407
164. Plebani A, Ugazio AG, Monafo V, et al. Clinical heterogeneity and reversibility of selective immunoglobulin A deficiency in 80 children. Lancet 1986;1(8485):829 31. 165. De Laat PC, Weemaes CM, Gonera R, et al. Clinical manifestations in selective IgA deficiency in childhood. A follow-up report. Acta Paediatr Scand 1991;80(8 9):798 804. 166. Joller PW, Buehler AK, Hitzig WH. Transitory and persistent IgA deficiency. Reevaluation of 19 pediatric patients once found to be deficient in serum IGA. J Clin Lab Immunol 1981;6 (2):97 101. 167. Proesmans W, Jaeken J, Eeckels R. D-penicillamine-induced IgA deficiency in Wilson’s disease. Lancet 1976;2(7989):804 5. 168. Leickly FE, Buckley RH. Development of IgA and IgG2 subclass deficiency after sulfasalazine therapy. J Pediatr 1986;108 (3):481 2. 169. Fontana A, Grob PJ, Sauter R, et al. IgA deficiency, epilepsy, and hydantoin medication. Lancet 1976;2(7979):228 31. 170. Seager J, Jamison DL, Wilson J, et al. IgA deficiency, epilepsy, and phenytoin treatment. Lancet 1975;2(7936):632 5. 171. Murphy EA, Morris AJ, Walker E, et al. Cyclosporine A induced colitis and acquired selective IgA deficiency in a patient with juvenile chronic arthritis. J Rheumatol 1993;20(8):1397 8. 172. Farr M, Struthers GR, Scott DG, et al. Fenclofenac-induced selective IgA deficiency in rheumatoid arthritis. Br J Rheumatol 1985;24(4):367 9. 173. Joubert PH, Aucamp AK, Potgieter GM, et al. Epilepsy and IgA deficiency the effect of sodium valproate. S Afr Med J 1977;52 (16):642 4. 174. Hammarstrom L, Smith CI, Berg CI. Captopril-induced IgA deficiency. Lancet 1991;337(8738):436. 175. Soothill JF, Hayes K, Dudgeon JA. The immunoglobulins in congenital rubella. Lancet 1966;2:1385 8. 176. Hammarstrom L, Lonnqvist B, Ringden O, et al. Transfer of IgA deficiency to a bone-marrow-grafted patient with aplastic anaemia. Lancet 1985;1(8432):778 81. 177. Forrest RD, Bostrom H, Dahlberg PA. IgA deficiency during penicillamine treatment. Br Med J 1977;1(6063):777. 178. Stanworth DR, Williamson JP, Shadforth M, et al. Drug-induced IgA deficiency in rheumatoid arthritis. Lancet 1977;1(8019):1001 2. 179. Ashrafi M, Hosseini SA, Abolmaali S, et al. Effect of antiepileptic drugs on serum immunoglobulin levels in children. Acta Neurol Belg 2010;110(1):65 70. 180. Gilhus NE, Aarli JA. The reversibility of phenytoin-induced IgA deficiency. J Neurol 1981;226(1):53 61. 181. Braconier JH. Reversible total IgA deficiency associated with phenytoin treatment. Scand J Infect Dis 1999;31(5):515 16. 182. Kato Z, Watanabe M, Kondo N. IgG2, IgG4 and IgA deficiency possibly associated with carbamazepine treatment. Eur J Pediatr 2003;162(3):209 11. 183. Maeoka Y, Hara T, Dejima S, et al. IgA and IgG2 deficiency associated with zonisamide therapy: a case report. Epilepsia 1997;38(5):611 13. 184. Suzuki T, Okada J, Kashiwazaki S. Selective IgA deficiency developed during treatment of scleroderma kidney with captopril. J Rheumatol 1988;15(4):716 17. 185. Seager J. IgA deficiency during treatment of infantile hypothyroidism with thyroxine. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1984;288 (6430):1562 3.
408
186. Horn J, Thon V, Bartonkova D, et al. Anti-IgA antibodies in common variable immunodeficiency (CVID): diagnostic workup and therapeutic strategy. Clin Immunol 2007;122(2):156 62. 187. Bjorkander J, Hammarstrom L, Smith CI, et al. Immunoglobulin prophylaxis in patients with antibody deficiency syndromes and anti-IgA antibodies. J Clin Immunol 1987;7(1):8 15. 188. Koistinen J, Cardenas RM, Fudenberg HH. Anti-IgA antibodies of limited specificity in healthy IgA deficient subjects. J Immunogenet 1977;4(5):295 300. 189. Sandler SG. How I manage patients suspected of having had an IgA anaphylactic transfusion reaction. Transfusion 2006;46 (1):10 13. 190. Brown R, Nelson M, Aklilu E, et al. An evaluation of the DiaMed assays for immunoglobulin A antibodies (anti-IgA) and IgA deficiency. Transfusion 2008;48(10):2057 9. 191. Yuan S, Goldfinger D. A readily available assay for antiimmunoglobulin A: Is this what we have been waiting for? Transfusion 2008;48(10):2048 50. 192. Laschinger C, Shepherd FA, Naylor DH. Anti-IgA-mediated transfusion reactions in Canada. Can Med Assoc J 1984;130(2):141 4. 193. Sandler SG, Mallory D, Malamut D, et al. IgA anaphylactic transfusion reactions. Transfus Med Rev 1995;9(1):1 8. 194. de Albuquerque Campos R, Sato MN, da Silva Duarte AJ. IgG anti-IgA subclasses in common variable immunodeficiency and association with severe adverse reactions to intravenous immunoglobulin therapy. J Clin Immunol 2000;20(1):77 82. 195. Ferreira A, Garcia Rodriguez MC, Lopez-Trascasa M, et al. AntiIgA antibodies in selective IgA deficiency and in primary immunodeficient patients treated with gamma-globulin. Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1988;47(2):199 207. 196. Hammarstrom L, Smith CI. HLA-A, B, C and DR antigens in immunoglobulin A deficiency. Tissue Antigens 1983;21(1):75 9. 197. Cunningham-Rundles C, Zhou Z, Mankarious S, et al. Long-term use of IgA-depleted intravenous immunoglobulin in immunodeficient subjects with anti-IgA antibodies. J Clin Immunol 1993;13 (4):272 8. 198. Eijkhout HW, van den Broek PJ, van der Meer JW. Substitution therapy in immunodeficient patients with anti-IgA antibodies or severe adverse reactions to previous immunoglobulin therapy. Neth J Med 2003;61(6):213 17. 199. Borte S, Pan-Hammarstrom Q, Liu C, et al. Interleukin-21 restores immunoglobulin production ex vivo in patients with common variable immunodeficiency and selective IgA deficiency. Blood 2009;114(19):4089 98. 200. Sundin U, Nava S, Hammarstrom L. Induction of unresponsiveness against IgA in IgA-deficient patients on subcutaneous immunoglobulin infusion therapy. Clin Exp Immunol 1998;112(2):341 6. 201. Vyas GN, Perkins HA, Fudenberg HH. Anaphylactoid transfusion reactions associated with anti-IgA. Lancet 1968;2(7563):312 15. 202. Espanol T, Catala M, Hernandez M, et al. Development of a common variable immunodeficiency in IgA-deficient patients. Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1996;80(3 Pt 1):333 5. 203. Aghamohammadi A, Mohammadi J, Parvaneh N, et al. Progression of selective IgA deficiency to common variable immunodeficiency. Int Arch Allergy Immunol 2008;147(2):87 92. 204. Goldstein MF, Goldstein AL, Dunsky EH, et al. Pediatric selective IgM immunodeficiency. Clin Dev Immunol 2008;2008:624850.
PART | 2
Primary Immune Deficiencies
205. Yel L, Ramanuja S, Gupta S. Clinical and immunological features in IgM deficiency. Int Arch Allergy Immunol 2009;150 (3):291 8. 206. Karsh J, Watts CS, Osterland CK. Selective immunoglobulin M deficiency in an adult: assessment of immunoglobulin production by peripheral blood lymphocytes in vitro. Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1982;25(3):386 94. 207. Ohno T, Inaba M, Kuribayashi K, et al. Selective IgM deficiency in adults: phenotypically and functionally altered profiles of peripheral blood lymphocytes. Clin Exp Immunol 1987;68 (3):630 7. 208. Yamasaki T. Selective IgM deficiency: functional assessment of peripheral blood lymphocytes in vitro. Intern Med 1992;31 (7):866 70. 209. Kondo N, Ozawa T, Kato Y, et al. Reduced secreted mu mRNA synthesis in selective IgM deficiency of Bloom’s syndrome. Clin Exp Immunol 1992;88(1):35 40. 210. Boes M, Schmidt T, Linkemann K, et al. Accelerated development of IgG autoantibodies and autoimmune disease in the absence of secreted IgM. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2000;97 (3):1184 9. 211. De la Concha EG, Garcia-Rodriguez MC, Zabay JM, et al. Functional assessment of T and B lymphocytes in patients with selective IgM deficiency. Clin Exp Immunol 1982;49(3):670 6. 212. Goldstein MF, Goldstein AL, Dunsky EH, et al. Selective IgM immunodeficiency: retrospective analysis of 36 adult patients with review of the literature. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2006;97(6):717 30. 213. Takeuchi T, Nakagawa T, Maeda Y, et al. Functional defect of B lymphocytes in a patient with selective IgM deficiency associated with systemic lupus erythematosus. Autoimmunity 2001;34 (2):115 22. 214. Kimura S, Tanigawa M, Nakahashi Y, et al. Selective IgM deficiency in a patient with Hashimoto’s disease. Intern Med 1993;32 (4):302 7. 215. Antar M, Lamarche J, Peguero A, et al. A case of selective immunoglobulin M deficiency and autoimmune glomerulonephritis. Clin Exp Nephrol 2008;12(4):300 4. 216. Arahata M, Tajiri K, Nomoto K, et al. A novel type of selective immunoglobulin M deficiency in a patient with autoimmune liver cirrhosis with recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma: a case report and review of the literature. Int Arch Allergy Immunol 2013;161 (1):91 6. 217. Vogelzang NJ, Corwin H, Finlay JL, et al. Clear cell sarcoma and selective IgM deficiency: a case report. Cancer 1982;49 (2):234 8. 218. Guill MF, Brown DA, Ochs HD, et al. IgM deficiency: clinical spectrum and immunologic assessment. Ann Allergy 1989;62 (6):547 52. 219. Mayumi M, Yamaoka K, Tsutsui T, et al. Selective immunoglobulin M deficiency associated with disseminated molluscum contagiosum. Eur J Pediatr 1986;145(1 2):99 103. 220. Ozen A, Baris S, Karakoc-Aydiner E, et al. Outcome of hypogammaglobulinemia in children: immunoglobulin levels as predictors. Clin Immunol 2010;137(3):374 83.