Top Banner
PRIMARY IMMUNE DEFICIENCY DISEASES Cherrie Anne T. Sierra, MD
72

Rheuma copy

Jan 20, 2017

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Rheuma copy

PRIMARY IMMUNE DEFICIENCY

DISEASESCherrie Anne T. Sierra, MD

Page 2: Rheuma copy

INTRODUCTIONImmune System- defense mechanisms to protect the host from

microbes and their virulence factors]• 3 Key Properties:1. highly diverse antigen receptors 2. immune memory3. immunologic tolerance

Page 3: Rheuma copy

1. Innate Immune System - rapid triggering of inflammatory responses - all cell lineages

2. Adaptive Immune System- mediated by T and B lymphocytes- antigen-presenting cells

2 Major Components

Page 4: Rheuma copy

Primary Immunodeficiency (PID)- expression or function of gene products is

genetically impaired - Mendelian inheritance- overall prevalence of PIDs ~ 5 per 100,000

individuals - combination of recurrent infections, inflammation

and autoimmunity

Page 5: Rheuma copy

- presence of recurrent or unusually severe infections

- detailed personal and family medical history genetic tests – Definitive Diagnosis

Page 6: Rheuma copy

Classification of Primary Immune Deficiency Diseases

Page 7: Rheuma copy
Page 8: Rheuma copy
Page 9: Rheuma copy

Tests Most Frequently Used to Diagnose PID

Page 10: Rheuma copy

Differentiation of phagocytic cells and related PID

Page 11: Rheuma copy

Deficiency of the Innate System1. Severe Congenital Neutropeniaimpaired neutrophil counts (<500 /L of blood)absence of puspremature cell death of granulocyte precursors

Diaqnosis:- bone marrow (block in granulopoiesis at the

promyelocytic stage

Page 12: Rheuma copy

Treatment:- hygiene- trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole- SQ injection (G-CSF

Page 13: Rheuma copy

2. Aspleniainfections by encapsulated bacteria

Diagnosis:- abdominal UTZ- Howell-Jolly bodies

Page 14: Rheuma copy

Treatment:- oral penicillin - vaccination

Page 15: Rheuma copy

3. Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency (LAD)

a. LAD I- Most common- caused by mutations in the 2 integrin gene

Page 16: Rheuma copy

b. LAD II- extremely rare - defect in selectin-mediated leukocyte c. LAD III- defect in a regulatory protein- can develop bleeding- causes impaired wound healing and delayed loss of

the umbilical cord

Page 17: Rheuma copy

• pus-free skin/tissue infections and massive hyperleukocytosis (>30,000/L)

• Diagnosis:- Immunofluorescence Treatment:- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT)

Page 18: Rheuma copy

4. Chronic Granulomatous Diseases- impaired phagocytic killing of microorganisms by

neutrophils and macrophages - incidence is approximately 1 per 200,000 live

births- causes deep-tissue bacterial and fungal abscesses

in macrophage-rich organs

Page 19: Rheuma copy

Infectious Agents:-Staphylococcus aureus and Serratia

marcescens

-Burkholderia cepacia

- Fungi (Aspergillus)

Page 20: Rheuma copy

- defective production of reactive oxygen species in the phagolysosome membrane

- results from the lack of a component of NADPH oxidase

Treatment:- trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole- Daily administration of azole derivatives (intraconazole)- HSCT

Page 21: Rheuma copy

5. Mendelian Susceptibility to Mycobacterial Disease - defect in the IL-12 interferon (IFN) leading to

impaired IFN--dependent macrophage activation- Tuberculous & nontuberculous mycobacteria --

Hallmark- prone to developing Salmonella infections- Treatment: interferon

Page 22: Rheuma copy

6. Toll-Like Receptor (TLR) Pathway Deficiencies- specific susceptibility to herpes simplex

encephalitis- Susceptibility to both invasive, pyogenic infections

and mycobacteria

Page 23: Rheuma copy

7. Complement Deficiency

- composed of plasma proteins that leads to the deposition of C3b fragments- deficiency in classic pathway (C1q, C1r, C1s, C4,

and C2) can predispose an individual to bacterial

Page 24: Rheuma copy

Diagnosis:- functional assays (CH50 and AP50 tests) Treatment:- daily administration of oral penicillin

Page 25: Rheuma copy

PRIMARY IMMUNODEFICIENCIES OF THE ADAPTIVE IMMUNE SYSTEM

(T Lymphocyte Deficiencies)

Page 26: Rheuma copy

PRIMARY IMMUNODEFICIENCIES OF THE ADAPTIVE IMMUNE SYSTEM

1. SEVERE COMBINED IMMUNODEFICIENCIES- complete absence of these cells (block in T cell

development) - estimated to be 1 in 50,000 to 100,000 live birthsClinical Manifestations:- recurrent oral candidiasis- failure to thrive- protracted diarrhea - acute interstitial pneumonitis caused by Pneumocystis jiroveci

Page 27: Rheuma copy

Diagnosis:- Lymphocytopenia - - absence of a thymic shadow on a chest x-ray - determination of the number of circulating T, B,

and NK lymphocytes– (Accurate Diagnosis)

Page 28: Rheuma copy

• Mechanisms:a. Cytokine-Signaling Deficiency- most frequent SCID phenotype - absence of both T and NK cells

Page 29: Rheuma copy

b. Purine Metabolism Deficiency- deficiency in adenosine deaminase (ADA) - induce premature cell death of lymphocyte

progenitors - cause bone dysplasia with abnormal

costochondral junctions and metaphyses and neurologic defects

Page 30: Rheuma copy

c. Defective Rearrangements of T and B Cell Receptors- selective deficiency in T and B lymphocytes - account for 20-30% of SCID - Can cause developmental defects

Page 31: Rheuma copy

d. Defective (Pre-)T Cell Receptor Signaling in the Thymus- deficiencies in CD3 subunits associated with the

(pre)TCR and CD45

e. Reticular Dysgenesis- causes T and NK deficiencies with severe

neutropenia and sensorineural deafness- results from an adenylate kinase 2 deficiency

Page 32: Rheuma copy

f. Defective Egress of Lymphocytes

- very low T cell counts- result from a deficiency in coronin-1ATreatment:- anti-infective therapies- immunoglobulin replacement- parenteral nutrition support- HSCT- a pegylated enzyme

Page 33: Rheuma copy

THYMIC DEFECTS

- profound T cell defecta. DiGeorge syndrome

-constellation of developmental defects-thymus is completely absent

Diagnosis - Immunofluorescence (hemizygous deletion in the long arm of chromosome 22)

Page 34: Rheuma copy

b. CHARGE -coloboma of the eye, heart anomaly, choanal atresia, retardation, genital and ear anomalies syndrome Treatment: thymic graft

Page 35: Rheuma copy

OMENN SYNDROME- erythrodermia, alopecia, hepatosplenomegaly and

failure to thrive- T cell lymphocytosis, eosinophilia, and low B cell

countTreatment: HSCT

Page 36: Rheuma copy

FUNCTIONAL T CELL DEFECTS - partially preserved T cell differentiation - Causes chronic diarrhea and failure to thrive - Diagnosis:- Phenotyping - in vitro functional assays

Page 37: Rheuma copy

a. Zeta-Associated Protein 70 (ZAP70) Deficiency

- complete absence of CD8+ T cells

b. Calcium Signaling Defects- defective antigen receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx- prone to autoimmune manifestations (blood

cytopenias) and nonprogressive muscle disease

Page 38: Rheuma copy

c. Human Leukocyteantigen (HLA) Class II Deficiency- low but variable CD4+ T cell counts - defective antigen-specific T and B cell responses- susceptible to herpesvirus, adenovirus and

enterovirus infections and chronic gut/liver Cryptosporidium infections

Page 39: Rheuma copy

d. HLA Class I Deficiency- reduced CD8+ T cell counts- loss of HLA class I antigen expression- cause chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and

severe vasculitis

Page 40: Rheuma copy

T CELL PRIMARY IMMUNODEFICIENCIES WITH DNA

REPAIR DEFECTS

a. Ataxia-Telangiectasia (AT) - autosomal recessive disorder - causes B cell defects - progressive T cell immunodeficiency- hallmark features: telangiectasia and cerebellar

ataxia- young children with IgA deficiency

Page 41: Rheuma copy

Diagnosis:- cytogenetic analysis (chromosomes 7 and 14)Treatment: immunoglobulin replacement

Page 42: Rheuma copy

b. Nijmegen Breakage Syndrome (NBS)- severe T and B cell combined immune deficiency

with autosomal recessive inheritance- exhibit microcephaly and a bird-like face- risk of malignancies is very high- deficiency in Nibrin caused by hypomorphic

mutations

Page 43: Rheuma copy

c. Dyskeratosis Congenita (Hoyeraal-Hreidarsson Syndrome)- absence of B and NK lymphocytes- progressive bone marrow failure, microcephaly, in

utero growth retardation and gastrointestinal disease

Page 44: Rheuma copy

d. Immunodeficiency with Centromeric and Facial Anomalies (ICF) - mild T cell immune deficiency with a more severe

B cell immune deficiency- Features: coarse face, digestive disease, and mild

mental retardationDiagnostic:- cytogenetic analysis

Page 45: Rheuma copy

T CELL PRIMARY IMMUNODEFICIENCIES WITH HYPER-

IGE

- elevated serum IgE levels Autosomal Recessive Hyper-IgE Syndrome - T and B lymphocyte counts are low- recurrent bacterial infections in the skin and

respiratory tract - pox viruses and human papillomaviruses

Page 46: Rheuma copy

AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT HYPER-IGE SYNDROME (HIES)

- mutation in the gene encoding the transcription factor STAT3

- combination of recurrent skin and lung infections complicated by pneumatoceles

- caused by pyogenic bacteria and fungiFeatures: - facial dysmorphy, defective loss of primary teeth,

hyperextensibility, scoliosis, and osteoporosis- Elevated serum IgE levels

Page 47: Rheuma copy

CARTILAGE HAIR HYPOPLASIA

- caused by mutations in the RMRP gene for a noncoding ribosome-associated RNA

- short-limb dwarfism, metaphyseal dysostosis and sparse hair

- can predispose to erythroblastopenia, autoimmunity, and tumors

Page 48: Rheuma copy

B cell differentiation and related primary immunodeficiencies (PIDs)

Page 49: Rheuma copy

CD40 LIGAND AND CD40 DEFICIENCIES

- B cell immune deficiency - leads to profound deficiency (IgG, IgA, and IgE)- prone to opportunistic infections (interstitial

pneumonitis), cholangitis (Cryptosporidium) and infection of the brain (Toxoplasma gondii)

Page 50: Rheuma copy

WISKOTT-ALDRICH SYNDROME

- incidence of approximately 1 in 200,000 live births- caused by mutations in the WASP gene - relative CD8+ T cell deficiency with low serum IgM

levels and decreased antigen-specific antibody responses

- clinical manifestations: recurrent bacterial infections, eczema, and bleeding

Page 51: Rheuma copy

- Complications: bronchopulmonary infections, viral infections, severe eczema, autoimmune manifestations, lymphoma

- Thrombocytopenia can be severe- typical feature: reduced-sized platelets on a blood

smear

Page 52: Rheuma copy

Diagnosis: intracellular immunofluorescence analysis of WAS protein

Treatment:- Prophylactic antibiotics, immunoglobulin G (IgG) supplementation, topical treatment of eczema- splenectomy improves platelet count - Allogeneic HSCT is curative

Page 53: Rheuma copy

B Lymphocyte Deficiencies

- account for 60-70% of all cases- B lymphocytes antibodies: IgM, IgG, IgADefective antibody production results to:- invasive, pyogenic bacterial infections- recurrent sinus and pulmonary infections

(Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis)

Page 54: Rheuma copy

- Parasitic infections (Giardia lambliasis) bacterial infections (Helicobacter and Campylobacter) of the gut

- infections rarely occur before the age of 6 monthsDiagnosis: - determination of serum Ig levels- Determination of antibody production - B cell phenotype determination in switched and

nonswitched memory B cells

Page 55: Rheuma copy

AGAMMAGLOBULINEMIA

- complete lack of antibody production - mutation in the BTK gene - severe, chronic, disseminated enteroviral

infections - Diagnosis: examination of bone marrow B cell

precursors- Treatment: immunoglobulin replacement

Page 56: Rheuma copy

HYPER-IGM (HIGM) SYNDROMES

- characterized by defective Ig CSR- results in very low serum levels of IgG and IgA and

elevated or normal serum IgM levels- have enlarged lymphoid organs- result from fetal rubella syndromeDiagnosis:- screening for an X-linked CD40L deficiency and an

autosomal recessive CD40 deficiency

Page 57: Rheuma copy

COMMON VARIABLE IMMUNODEFICIENCY (CVID)

- characterized by low serum levels of one or more Ig isotypes

- prevalence is estimated to be 1 in 20,000- develop lymphoproliferation (splenomegaly), granulomatous lesions, colitis, antibody-mediated autoimmune disease, and lymphomas

Page 58: Rheuma copy

Diagnosis:- should exclude the presence of hypomorphic mutations associated with agammaglobulinemia or more subtle T cell defects

Page 59: Rheuma copy

SELECTIVE IG ISOTYPE DEFICIENCIES

- IgA deficiency -- most common - increased numbers of acute and chronic

respiratory infections (bronchiectasis) - increased susceptibility to drug allergies, atopic

disorders, and autoimmune diseases - IgA deficiency may progress to CVIDTreatment: immunoglobulin replacement

Page 60: Rheuma copy

SELECTIVE ANTIBODY DEFICIENCY TO POLYSACCHARIDE ANTIGENS

- prone to S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae infections of the respiratory tract- Defective production of antibodies against polysaccharide antigens - a defect in marginal zone B cells, a B cell subpopulation involved in T-independent antibody responses

Page 61: Rheuma copy

IMMUNOGLOBULIN REPLACEMENT

-IgG antibodies have a half-life of 21-28 daysTreatment:- injection of plasma-derived polyclonal IgG (repeated every 3-4 weeks, with a residual target level of 800 mg/mL in patients who had very low IgG level)- Immunoglobulin replacement can be performed by IV or

subcutaneous routes (800 mg/mL once a week)--lifelong therapy

main goal is to reduce the frequency of the respiratory tract infections and prevent chronic lung and sinus disease

Page 62: Rheuma copy

PRIMARY IMMUNODEFICIENCIES AFFECTING REGULATORY

PATHWAYS

a. Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis- unremitting activation of CD8+ T lymphocytes and

macrophages that leads to organ damage (liver, bone marrow, and CNS)

- results from impair T and NK lymphocyte cytotoxicity

- EBV is the most frequent trigger

Page 63: Rheuma copy

Clinical Features:- fever, hepatosplenomegay, edema, neurologic

diseases, blood cytopenia, increased liver enzymes, hypofibrinogenemia, high triglyceride levels, elevated markers of T cell activation

Page 64: Rheuma copy

Diagnosis:- Functional assays of postactivation cytotoxic

granule exocytosis The conditions can be classified into three

subsets:1. Familial HLH with autosomal recessive inheritance, including perforin deficiency

Page 65: Rheuma copy

2. HLH with partial albinism- hair examination can help in the diagnosis- Chediak-Higashi syndrome, Griscelli syndrome, and Hermansky Pudlak syndrome type II

Page 66: Rheuma copy

3. X-linked proliferative syndrome (XLP) - induction of HLH following EBV infection- May develop progressive

hypogammaglobulinemia- life-threatening complicationTreatment: -immunosuppression (cytotoxic agent VP-16 or anti-T cell antibodies)- HSCT

Page 67: Rheuma copy

Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome

- nonmalignant T and B lymphoproliferation- caused by a defect in Fas-mediated apoptosis of

lymphocytes- causing splenomegaly and enlarged lymph nodes- Hallmark: CD4 -CD8- TCR+ T cells (20-50%)

Page 68: Rheuma copy

- 70% of patients also display autoimmune manifestations (autoimmune cytopenias, Guillain-Barre syndrome, uveitis, and hepatitis)

Treatment: pro-apoptotic drugs

Page 69: Rheuma copy

Colitis, Autoimmunity, and Primary Immunodeficiencies

- Several PIDs can cause severe gut inflammationa. Immunodysregulation Polyendocrinopathy Enteropathy X-linked Syndrome (IPEX)- caused by loss-of-function mutations in the gene

encoding the transcription factor FOXP3- widespread inflammatory enteropathy, food

intolerance, skin rashes, autoimmune cytopenias and diabetes

Treatment: allogeneic HSCT

Page 70: Rheuma copy

b. Autoimmune Polyendocrinopathy Candidiasis Ectodermal Dysplasia (APECED) Syndrome- mutations in the autoimmune regulator (AIRE)

gene- Candida infection is often associated with this

syndrome

Page 71: Rheuma copy

CONCLUSION

important to raise awareness of these diseasesearly diagnosis is essential for establishing an

appropriate therapeutic regimen A precise molecular diagnosis is not only

necessary for initiating the most suitable treatment but it is also important for genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis

Page 72: Rheuma copy

Thank You