| Literature DB >> 28679735 |
Charline Miot1, Kohsuke Imai2, Chihaya Imai3, Anthony J Mancini4,5, Zeynep Yesim Kucuk6, Tokomki Kawai7, Ryuta Nishikomori7, Etsuro Ito8, Isabelle Pellier9, Sophie Dupuis Girod10, Jeremie Rosain1, Shinya Sasaki8, Shanmuganathan Chandrakasan6,11, Jana Pachlopnik Schmid12,13, Tsubasa Okano2, Estelle Colin14, Alberto Olaya-Vargas15, Marco Yamazaki-Nakashimada15, Waseem Qasim16, Sara Espinosa Padilla15, Andrea Jones17, Alfons Krol18, Nyree Cole19, Stephen Jolles20, Jack Bleesing6, Thomas Vraetz21, Andrew R Gennery22, Mario Abinun22,23, Tayfun Güngör12,13, Beatriz Costa-Carvalho24, Antonio Condino-Neto25, Paul Veys26, Steven M Holland27,28, Gulbu Uzel27,28, Despina Moshous29,30, Benedicte Neven29,30, Stéphane Blanche29,30, Stephan Ehl21, Rainer Döffinger31,32, Smita Y Patel32, Anne Puel29,33,34, Jacinta Bustamante1,29,33,34, Erwin W Gelfand17, Jean-Laurent Casanova29,31,33,34,35, Jordan S Orange36, Capucine Picard1,29,30,33,34.
Abstract
X-linked recessive ectodermal dysplasia with immunodeficiency is a rare primary immunodeficiency caused by hypomorphic mutations of the IKBKG gene encoding the nuclear factor κB essential modulator (NEMO) protein. This condition displays enormous allelic, immunological, and clinical heterogeneity, and therapeutic decisions are difficult because NEMO operates in both hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic cells. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is potentially life-saving, but the small number of case reports available suggests it has been reserved for only the most severe cases. Here, we report the health status before HSCT, transplantation outcome, and clinical follow-up for a series of 29 patients from unrelated kindreds from 11 countries. Between them, these patients carry 23 different hypomorphic IKBKG mutations. HSCT was performed from HLA-identical related donors (n = 7), HLA-matched unrelated donors (n = 12), HLA-mismatched unrelated donors (n = 8), and HLA-haploidentical related donors (n = 2). Engraftment was documented in 24 patients, and graft-versus-host disease in 13 patients. Up to 7 patients died 0.2 to 12 months after HSCT. The global survival rate after HSCT among NEMO-deficient children was 74% at a median follow-up after HSCT of 57 months (range, 4-108 months). Preexisting mycobacterial infection and colitis were associated with poor HSCT outcome. The underlying mutation does not appear to have any influence, as patients with the same mutation had different outcomes. Transplantation did not appear to cure colitis, possibly as a result of cell-intrinsic disorders of the epithelial barrier. Overall, HSCT can cure most clinical features of patients with a variety of IKBKG mutations.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28679735 PMCID: PMC5609334 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-03-771600
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113