| Literature DB >> 32184784 |
Antonio Pecoraro1, Ludovica Crescenzi1, Gilda Varricchi1,2, Giancarlo Marone3,4, Giuseppe Spadaro1,2.
Abstract
Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is the most frequent primary immunodeficiency (PID) in adulthood and is characterized by severe reduction of immunoglobulin serum levels and impaired antibody production in response to vaccines and pathogens. Beyond the susceptibility to infections, CVID encompasses a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations related to a complex immune dysregulation that also affects liver. Although about 50% CVID patients present persistently deranged liver function, burden, and nature of liver involvement have not been systematically investigated in most cohort studies published in the last decades. Therefore, the prevalence of liver disease in CVID widely varies depending on the study design and the sampling criteria. This review seeks to summarize the evidence about the most relevant causes of liver involvement in CVID, including nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH), infections and malignancies. We also describe the clinical features of liver disease in some monogenic forms of PID included in the clinical spectrum of CVID as ICOS, NFKB1, NFKB2, CTLA-4, PI3Kδ pathway, ADA2, and IL21-R genetic defects. Finally, we discuss the clinical applications of the various diagnostic tools and the possible therapeutic approaches for the management of liver involvement in the context of CVID.Entities:
Keywords: antibody deficiency; common variable immune deficiency; liver disease; liver transplant; monogenic immune defects; nodular regenerative hyperplasia; primary immuno deficiency; transient elastography
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32184784 PMCID: PMC7059194 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Prevalence of liver disease in various cohorts of CVID adult patients.
| Study | Year | Sample size | Study type | Prevalence (%) | Outcome variable | Clinical associations |
| Cunningham-Rundles et al. ( | 1999 | 248 | Retrospective | 11.9 | Liver dysfunction (including viral hepatitis and primary biliary cholangitis) | NA |
| Ward et al. ( | 2008 | 108 | Retrospective | 43.5 | Deranged liver function (i.e., increased liver enzyme levels) | Hepatomegaly, Granuloma, Cytopenias, Lymphocytic enteropathy |
| Malamut et al. ( | 2008 | 94 | Retrospective | 54.2 | Increased liver enzyme levels, hepatomegaly and/or signs of portal hypertension | NA |
| Farmer et al. ( | 2018 | 205 | Retrospective/perspective | 9.3 | Histologically proved lymphoproliferative liver disease (i.e., NRH and hepatitis) | NA |
| Slade et al. ( | 2018 | 116 | Cross-sectional | 3 | Autoimmune liver disease | NA |
| Azzu et al. ( | 2019 | 86 | retrospective | 79 | abnormal liver function test profile OR abnormal liver imaging OR abnormal liver histology | Thrombocytopenia, splenomegaly |
| Crescenzi et al. ( | 2019 | 77 | Cross-sectional | 33.8 | Liver fibrosis (measured as increased liver stiffness) | Polyclonal lymphoproliferation, enteropathy |
FIGURE 1Main causes of liver disease in CVID. The clinical spectrum of CVID includes predisposition to infections, immune-dysregulation-related manifestations (i.e., autoimmunity or lymphocytic infiltration) and malignancies. Liver involvement in CVID may rely on each of these three pathogenetic mechanisms. NRH is the most common histopathologic finding in CVID and is thought to be related, at least in part, to an auto-reactive T-cell intrasinusoidal infiltration, while a subset of patients may present a more severe portal inflammatory infiltration consistent with inferface hepatitis, as observed in autoimmune hepatitis. Splenomegaly is a common clinical feature in CVID patients and contributes to the increase of portal venous pressure, as shown in detail in Figure 2. In past decades, contaminated immunoglobulin preparations were a significant cause of iatrogenic viral hepatitis (i.e., HBV, HCV, CMV, and EBV), while Giardia lamblia, which is a common cause of chronic enteritis in CVID, may affect liver as extra-intestinal localization. Finally, liver may be target of both primary and metastatic malignancies. These latter may be the result of both gastrointestinal cancers (i.e., stomach and colon) and hematological malignancies. The figure was created with Biorender.com.
FIGURE 2Nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) is the result of an intra-hepatic vasculopathy, leading to the development of hepatocyte nodules that compress surrounding sinusoids, potentially determining perisinusoidal fibrosis. In CVID patients, NRH is associated with a chronic cytotoxic T cell infiltration of liver sinusoidal endothelium. This may cause an alteration of the blood flow through portal system causing the reduction of liver parenchymal perfusion and the increase of portal pressure. The perturbation of portal system flow may also be the result of the hemodynamic changes related to splenomegaly, which causes an increase of splenic venous flow contributing to the increase of portal pressure. The increase of portal pressure could be in turn responsible for a further spleen enlargement. The figure was created with Biorender.com.
Prevalence of nodular regenerative Hyperplasia in various cohorts of CVID adult patients.
| Study | Year | Sample size | General Prevalence | Prevalence in biopsied patients | Other findings |
| Ward et al. ( | 2008 | 108 | 12% (13/108) | 56.5% (13/23) | Clinical association with Hepatomegaly, Granuloma, Cytopenias, Lymphocytic enteropathy |
| Malamut et al. ( | 2008 | 94 | 21.2% (20/94) | 86.9% (20/23) | Portal hypertension in 75% of the cases Clinical association with diseases and peripheral lymphocytic abnormalities |
| Resnick et al. ( | 2012 | 473 | <1% (2/473) | NA | NA |
| Fuss et al. ( | 2013 | 261 | 5.3% (14/261) | NA | 64% of NRH patients had elevated hepatic venous pressure gradients (HVPG) consistent with portal hypertension |
| Azzu et al. ( | 2019 | 86 | 32.5% (28/86) | 41.1% (28/68) | A subset of patients had portal hypertension histological cirrhosis, associated with increase in mortality |
Genetic, immunological and clinical features in monogenic forms of PID in the clinical spectrum of CVID with liver involvement.
| Genetic defect (OMIM) | Effect on protein | Inheritance | Most frequent clinical manifestations | Most frequent Immune phenotype | Liver involvement |
| ICOS ( | LOF | AR | Respiratory tract infections | Pan-hypogammaglobulinemia | HHV-6 hepatitis |
| NFKB1 ( | LOF (H) | AD | Respiratory tract infections | Pan-hypogammaglobulinemia | Increase of liver enzymes |
| NFKB2 ( | LOF (H) | AD | Respiratory tract infections, Skin infections, Opportunistic infections | Pan-hypogammaglobulinemia | Increase of liver enzymes |
| CTLA-4 ( | LOF (H) | AD | Lymphoproliferation, Respiratory tract infections and bronchiectasis | Pan-hypogammaglobulinemia | Unspecified liver involvement in 12% patients |
| LRBA ( | LOF | AR | Autoimmunity cytopenias | Pan-hypogammaglobulinemia | Hepatomegaly |
| PI3Kδ pathway ( | GOF of PI3Kδ (APDS1) | AD | Respiratory tract infections and bronchiectasis | Low IgG and IgA | Increase of liver enzymes |
| ADA2 ( | LOF | AR | Recurrent infections | Hypogammaglobulinemia | Increase of liver enzymes |
| IL-21R ( | LOF | AR | Respiratory tract infections and bronchiectasis | Hypogammaglobulinemia | Cryptosporidium infection |