Abstract

Doc number: 13

Abstract

Background: Symptomatic Primary Humoral Immunodeficiency Diseases (PHID) constitute a highly heterogeneous group of diseases characterized by a shared hypogammaglobulinemia, resulting in increased risk of recurrent or severe infections. Associations have been described with a variety of immunological abnormalities involving B and T-cell differentiation, T-cell activation and innate immunity. However, PHID discrimination remains based on B-lymphocyte abnormalities and other components of the immune system have not been sufficiently taken into account. We carried out unsupervised and supervised methods for classification in a cohort of 81 symptomatic PHID patients to evaluate the relative importance of 23 immunological parameters and to select relevant markers that may be useful for diagnosis and prognosis.

Results: We identified five groups of patients, among which the percentage of PHID complications varied substantially. Combining the set of markers involved in PHID supported the existence of two distinct mechanisms associated with complications. Switched memory B-cell attrition and CD8+ HLA-DR + activated T-cell increase were the prominent abnormalities observed in PHID complications. Furthermore, in a subgroup of 57 patients with common variable immunodeficiency, the classification that added CD8+ HLA-DR + to the consensual EUROclass classification was better than the EUROclass model in predicting complications.

Conclusion: These results highlight the importance of T-cell activation that may improve discrimination of PHID patients in specific subgroups and help to identify patients with different clinical outcomes.

Details

Title
T-cell activation discriminates subclasses of symptomatic primary humoral immunodeficiency diseases in adults
Author
Picat, Marie-Quitterie; Thiébaut, Rodolphe; Lifermann, François; Delbrel, Xavier; Adoue, Daniel; Wittkop, Linda; Fauchais, Anne-Laure; Rispal, Patrick; Moreau, Jean-François; Viallard, Jean-François
Pages
13
Publication year
2014
Publication date
2014
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712172
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1518540255
Copyright
© 2014 Picat et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.