| Literature DB >> 26339470 |
Rik Schrijvers1, Liesbeth Gilissen2, Anca Mirela Chiriac3, Pascal Demoly3.
Abstract
Drug hypersensitivity reactions (DHR) have been present since the advent of drugs. In particular T-cell mediated delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions represent a heterogeneous clinical entity with a diverse pathogenesis and result in a considerable burden of morbidity and mortality not only driven by the reactions themselves but also by the use of alternatives which are sometimes less effective or even more dangerous. Diagnostic procedures rely on clinical history, skin testing and potential provocation testing, whereas validated in vitro diagnostic procedures are still lacking for most of them. Recent work in the field of pharmacogenomics combined with basic scientific research has provided insights in the pathogenesis of abacavir and carbamazepine hypersensitivities linked with certain human leucocyte antigen risk alleles. Nevertheless, important scientific questions on how other DHR arise and how host-drug interactions occur, remain unanswered. Recent work indicates an intricate relation between host, drug and pathogens in severe cutaneous and systemic reactions and provides more insights in the role of regulatory T-cells and viral reactivation in these reactions. In this review we focus on type IV delayed-type DHR, and address recent advances in the pathogenesis, pharmacogenomics, and diagnosis of these reactions with an emphasis on the understandings arising from basic research.Entities:
Keywords: Abacavir hypersensitivity syndrome; Altered self-repertoire model; Drug allergy; Drug hypersensitivity; Hapten; Lymphocyte proliferation assay; Pharmacogenomics; Regulatory T-cells; Tissue-resident memory T-cells; pi-concept
Year: 2015 PMID: 26339470 PMCID: PMC4558726 DOI: 10.1186/s13601-015-0073-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Allergy ISSN: 2045-7022 Impact factor: 5.871
Classification of DHR according to Gell and Coombs and adapted by Pichler et al. [4]
| Type | Type of immune response | Pathophysiology | Clinical symptoms | Typical chronology of the reaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | IgE | Mast cell and basophil degranulation | Anaphylactic shock, Angio-oedema, Urticaria, Bronchospasm | Within 1–6 h after the last intake of the drug |
| II | IgG and complement | IgG and complement-dependent cytotoxicity | Cytopenia | 5–15 days after the start of the eliciting drug |
| III | IgM or IgG and complement or FcR | Deposition of immune complexes | Serum sickness, urticaria, vasculitis | 7–8 days for serum sickness/urticaria |
| IVa | Th1 (IFNγ) | Monocytic inflammation | Eczema | 1–21 days after the start of the eliciting drug |
| IVb | Th2 (IL-4 and IL-5) | Eosinophilic inflammation | MPE, DRESS | 1 to several days after the start of the eliciting drug for MPE |
| IVc | Cytotoxic T-cells (perforin, granzyme B, FasL) | Keratinocyte death mediated by CD4 or CD8 | FDE, MPE, SJS/TEN, Pustular exanthema | 1–2 days after the start of the eliciting drug for fixed drug eruption |
| IVd | T-cells (IL-8/CXCL8) | Neutrophilic inflammation | AGEP | Typically 1–2 days after the start of the eliciting drug (but could be longer) |
Table adapted from [2].
Fig. 1Schematic examples for the (pro)hapten hypothesis, p-i concept and altered self-repertoire model (adopted from Ostrov et al. [16]). Upper part TCR monitor the antigens or ligands presented by the HLA molecules. These HLA ligands are typically peptides loaded onto the HLA molecule inside the antigen-presenting cells and subsequently exposed on the surface. Different allelic variants of HLA molecules result in different binding specificities and a specific profile of presented ligands. Here, peptide A, but not peptide B, can bind to the HLA molecule. Typically, T-cells do not react to presented self-peptides, as these auto-reactive T-cells are negatively selected during thymic development, but will react once they encounter an unknown ligand (e.g., a virus-derived peptide). In the lower part, three scenarios in which drugs can result in a HLA-dependent reaction: in (1) a HLA-specific drug haptenated peptide is presented, according to the (pro)hapten hypothesis; in (2) the HLA molecule itself is modified in a region exposed to the TCR, resulting in a reaction according to the p-i concept; and in (3) the binding specificity of the HLA molecule is altered by the presence of the drug, resulting in presentation of novel ligands such as peptide B, as in the altered self-repertoire hypothesis.
Fig. 2Abacavir-induced altered self-peptide presentation (adopted from Ostrov et al. [16] and Yun et al. [25]). a Crystal structure of a peptide, HSITYLLPV or Pep-V (cyan) bound to HLA-B*57:01 (gray) together with abacavir (shown as spheres, orange for carbon, blue for nitrogen, and red for oxygen) [16]. b Without abacavir, the HLA-B*57:01 presents the ‘normal’ self-repertoire peptides and thus does not trigger an immune response (left). In the presence of abacavir, the drug can be incorporated in the F pocket of the HLA molecule thereby altering the peptide repertoire that is loaded onto this molecule. Abacavir binding favors binding of peptides with tryptophan (W) or phenylalanine at the C-terminus (position 9) rather than the small aliphatic residues (e.g., valinine, alanine, or isoleucine) which are normally bound to unmodified HLA-B*57:01 [16, 28]. This results in recognition of neo-antigens by neo-antigen primed CD8+ T-cells (middle). On the right, a hypothetical model of how abacavir might result in the selection of shorter peptide or is recognized itself by the TCR [25].
Well-defined HLA associations in DHR [28]
| Drug | Syndrome | HLA allele | HLA carrier rate | NPV | PPV (%) | NNT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abacavir | ABC HS | B*57:01 [ | 5–8% Caucasian | 100% | 55 | 13 |
| Allopurinol | SJS/TEN and DRESS/DIHS | B*58:01 [ | 9–11% Han Chinese | 100% in Han Chinese | 3 | 250 |
| Carbamazepine | SJS/TEN | B*15:02 [ | 10–15% Han Chinese | 100% in Han Chinese | 3 | 1,000 |
| Dapsone | DRESS/DIHS | B*13:01 [ | 28% Papuans, Australian aborigines; 2–20% Chinese; 1.5% Japanese; 1–12% Indian; 2–4% Southeast Asians | 99.8% | 7.8 | 84 |
NPV negative predictive value, PPV positive predictive value, NNT numbers needed to test (to prevent one case), ABC HS abacavir hypersensitivity syndrome.