| Literature DB >> 31117958 |
James C Barton1,2,3, Jackson C Barton4, Luigi F Bertoli4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) deficiency may increase risk of respiratory tract infection in adults unselected for IgG or IgG subclass levels. In a retrospective study, we sought to determine associations of serum MBL levels with clinical and laboratory characteristics of unrelated non-Hispanic white adults at diagnosis of IgG subclass deficiency (IgGSD). We computed the correlation of first and second MBL levels expressed as natural logarithms (ln) in a patient subgroup. We compared these characteristics of all adults with and without MBL ≤50 ng/mL: age; sex; body mass index; upper/lower respiratory tract infection; diabetes; autoimmune condition(s); atopy; other allergy; corticosteroid therapy; and subnormal serum IgG subclasses, IgA, and IgM. We performed logistic regression on MBL ≤50 ng/mL (dichotomous) using the three independent variables with the lowest values of p in univariate comparisons.Entities:
Keywords: IgG subclass deficiency; Mannose-binding lectin; Pneumonia; Respiratory tract infection; Sinusitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31117958 PMCID: PMC6532233 DOI: 10.1186/s12865-019-0296-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Immunol ISSN: 1471-2172 Impact factor: 3.615
Characteristics of 219 adults with IgG subclass deficiency1
| Characteristic | Mannose-binding lectin ≤50 ng/mL ( | Mannose-binding lectin > 50 ng/mL ( | Value of p2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age, years (SD) | 54 ± 15 | 51 ± 14 | 0.2909 |
| Male, % (n) | 19.4 (7) | 16.9 (31) | 0.8096 |
| Mean body mass index, kg/m2 (SD) | 31.3 ± 7.0 | 29.6 ± 6.9 | 0.1865 |
| Upper respiratory tract infection, % (n)4 | 83.3 (30) | 92.3 (169) | 0.1094 |
| Lower respiratory tract infection, % (n)4 | 75.0 (27) | 82.5 (151) | 0.3487 |
| Diabetes mellitus, % (n) 4 | 13.9 (5) | 15.8 (29) | 1.0000 |
| Autoimmune condition(s), % (n)4,5 | 50.0 (18) | 52.5 (96) | 0.8560 |
| Atopy, % (n)4 | 33.3 (12) | 30.6 (56) | 0.8440 |
| Other allergy, % (n) 4 | 44.4 (16) | 40.4 (74) | 0.7124 |
| Corticosteroid therapy, % (n) | 30.5 (11) | 36.6 (67) | 0.5702 |
| Mean total IgG, mg/dL (SD)6 | 805 ± 218 | 775 ± 207 | 0.4555 |
| Subnormal IgG1, % (n) | 69.4 (25) | 66.7 (122) | 0.8472 |
| Subnormal IgG2, % (n) | 13.9 (5) | 8.7 (16) | 0.3538 |
| Subnormal IgG3, % (n) | 61.1 (22) | 66.7 (122) | 0.5662 |
| Subnormal IgG4, % (n) | 2.8 (1) | 7.7 (14) | 0.4750 |
| Subnormal IgA, % (n) | 2.8 (1) | 4.9 (9) | 1.0000 |
| Subnormal IgM, % (n) | 22.2 (8) | 10.4 (19) | 0.0565 |
1Abbreviations: SD standard deviation. Subnormal Ig levels were defined as those > 2 SD below the respective means: IgG1 < 4.2 g/L (< 422 mg/dL); IgG2 < 1.2 g/L (< 117 mg/dL); IgG3 < 0.4 g/L (< 41 mg/dL); IgG4 0 g/L (< 1 mg/dL); IgA < 700 mg/L (< 70 mg/dL); and IgM < 400 mg/L (< 40 mg/dL) [15]
2Comparisons were made with Fisher’s exact test (two-tailed). These are nominal values of p. Bonferroni correction for 17 comparisons yielded a revised p for significance of < 0.0020
3Upper respiratory tract infection was defined as reports of sinusitis, otitis media, mastoiditis, pharyngitis, and tonsillitis. Lower respiratory tract infection was defined as reports of bronchitis, pneumonia, and bronchiectasis
4These conditions were diagnosed before referral for the present evaluations
5These autoimmune conditions (n) were diagnosed in 114 of 219 patients (52.1%): Hashimoto thyroiditis (44); rheumatoid arthritis (27); Sjögren syndrome (26); systemic lupus erythematosus (20); psoriatic arthritis (8); ankylosing spondylitis (6); Graves disease, psoriasis, and Raynaud phenomenon (5 each); inflammatory arthritis (3); autoimmune diabetes, Crohn disease, multiple sclerosis, polyarthritis with iritis/uveitis, and sarcoidosis, (2 each); and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, Guillain-Barré syndrome, mixed connective tissue disorder, myasthenia gravis, polymyositis, transverse myelitis, Schnitzler syndrome, Sweet syndrome, ulcerative colitis, undifferentiated connective tissue disease, and vitiligo (1 each). Two or more autoimmune conditions were diagnosed in 46 of 219 patients (21.0%)
6Proportions of patients with and without MBL ≤50 ng/mL who had total IgG < 7.0 g/L (< 700 mg/dL) did not differ significantly (38.9% (n = 14) vs. 39.0% (n = 71); p = ~ 1.0000)
Fig. 1First and second serum mannose-binding levels in 14 adults with IgG subclass deficiency. Correlation of first and second serum mannose-binding levels expressed as natural logarithms (ln) in 14 adults with IgG subclass deficiency. The median interval between the first and second measurements was 125 days (range 18–1031). The lowest point represents observations on four patients. For ln-transformed data: adjusted r2 = 0.9675; Pearson correlation coefficient 0.9849; p < 0.0001. For non-transformed data: adjusted r2 = 0.7933; Pearson correlation coefficient 0.8935; p < 0.0001 (graph not shown)
Fig. 2Serum mannose-binding lectin levels in 219 adults with IgG subclass deficiency
Subnormal serum IgG subclass levels in 219 adults with IgG subclass deficiency
| Subnormal IgG subclass immunophenotypesa | Mannose-binding lectin ≤50 ng/mL | Mannose-binding lectin > 50 ng/mL | Value of p2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| IgG1 alone, % (n) | 38.9 (14) | 29.5 (54) | 0.3245 |
| IgG2 alone, % (n) | 0 | 0.55 (1) | 1.0000 |
| IgG3 alone, % (n) | 25.0 (9) | 29.0 (53) | 0.6906 |
| IgG1/IgG3, % (n) | 22.2 (8) | 25.7 (47) | 0.8338 |
| IgG1/IgG4, % (n) | 0 | 3.3 (6) | 0.5925 |
| IgG2/IgG3, % (n) | 8.3 (3) | 1.1 (2) | 0.0324 |
| IgG3/IgG4, % (n) | 0 | 2.2 (4) | 1.0000 |
| IgG1/IgG2/IgG3, % (n) | 2.8 (1) | 6.6 (12) | 0.6992 |
| IgG1/IgG3/IgG4, % (n) | 2.8 (1) | 1.6 (3) | 0.5151 |
| IgG2/IgG3/IgG4, % (n) | 0 | 0.55 (1) | 1.0000 |
aSubnormal IgG subclass levels were defined as those > 2 standard deviations below the respective means: IgG1 < 4.2 g/L (< 422 mg/dL); IgG2 < 1.2 g/L (< 117 mg/dL); IgG3 < 0.4 g/L (< 41 mg/dL); and IgG4 0 g/L (< 1 mg/dL) [15]
2Comparisons were made with Fisher’s exact test (two-tailed). These are nominal values of p. Bonferroni correction for 10 comparisons yielded a revised p for significance of < 0.0050