| Literature DB >> 34572574 |
Lena Lutz1, Johanna Rohrhofer1, Sonja Zehetmayer2, Michael Stingl3, Eva Untersmayr1.
Abstract
Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is a severe multi-systemic disease characterized by debilitating fatigue that is not relieved by rest. The causes of the disease are still largely unexplained, and no causative treatment is currently available. Changes in the immune response are considered as fundamental in the development of ME/CFS. Thus, we aimed to evaluate the immunological profile of ME/CFS patients in a retrospective data analysis. As part of the routine workup for ME/CFS patients, a differential blood count, leukocyte subtyping, and quantification of immunoglobulins and IgG subclasses, as well as a complement analysis, was performed. Out of 262 ME/CFS patients, 64.9% had a reduction or deficiency in at least one of the listed immune parameters. In contrast, 26.3% showed signs of immune activation or inflammation. A total of 17.6% of the ME/CFS patients had an unclassified antibody deficiency, with IgG3 and IgG4 subclass deficiencies as the most common phenotypes. Reduced MBL (mannose-binding lectin) levels were found in 32% of ME/CFS patients, and MBL deficiency in 7%. In summary, the present results confirmed the relevance of immune dysfunction in ME/CFS patients underlining the involvement of a dysfunctional immune response in the disease. Thus, immune parameters are relevant disease biomarkers, which might lead to targeted therapeutic approaches in the future.Entities:
Keywords: immune activation; immune dysfunction; immunodeficiency; inflammation; myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34572574 PMCID: PMC8465819 DOI: 10.3390/biom11091359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the study population (n = 262).
| Parameter | Absolute | Mean | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex (male/female) | 83/179 | ||
| Age (years) | 41 | 18–79 | |
| Age groups (18–40 years/41–80 years) | 131/131 | ||
| Fulfilling of all IOM-criteria for the diagnosis ME/CFS | 207 | ||
| Duration of disease until immunodiagnostics (years) | 9.4 | 1–39 | |
| Patients with recurrent infections | 158 | ||
| Patients diagnosed with acute EBV infection at onset of fatigue | 45 | ||
| positive EBV antibodies | 194 |
Figure 1Patient flow chart.
Figure 2Frequency of reduced humoral immune parameters in 262 ME/CFS patients. Reduced humoral immune parameters not found within the norm reference range as indicated by the 95% Clopper–Pearson confidence interval calculation are marked as blue bars. Gray bars indicate parameters, which lie within the 95% CI of the general population.
Figure 3Frequency of diagnosed immunodeficiencies in 262 Austrian ME/CFS patients based on laboratory testing and clinical history. Blue bars indicate the percentage of clinically diagnosed immunodeficiencies in the ME/CFS patients’ cohort. Due to the descriptive evaluation of the data, no statistical comparison has been performed.
Number of patients with humoral and cellular immune parameter reductions.
| Humoral Parameter | Cellular Parameter | No. of Patients (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|
| CD4+ T-cell lymphopenia | 5 (2–12) | |
| reduced CD8-CD57+ NK cell counts | 6 (2–13) | |
| Reduction of at least one of total IgG, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, IgA or IgM levels in combination with… | reduced CD3+CD16+CD56+ NKT cell counts | 0 (0–4) |
| reduced CD3-CD16+CD56+ NK cell counts | 8 (3–16) | |
| CD4+ T-cell lymphopenia | 4 (1–10) | |
| CD8+ T-cell lymphopenia | 3 (1–9) | |
| Unclassified antibody deficiency in combination with… | reduced CD8-CD57+ NK cell counts | 4 (1–10) |
| reduced CD3+CD16+CD56+ NKT cell counts | 0 (0–4) | |
| reduced CD3-CD16+CD56+ NK cell counts | 6 (2–13) | |
| CD4+ T-cell lymphopenia | 4 (1–10) |
Number of ME/CFS patients with elevated immune parameters (humoral and cellular).
| Parameter | No. of Patients (95%CI) (n = 262) |
|---|---|
| CD4+ T-cells | 12 (6–21) |
| CD8+ T-cells | 4 (1–10) |
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| CD3+CD16+CD56+ NKT cell counts | 7 (3–14) |
| CD3-CD16+CD56+ NK cell counts | 4 (1–10) |
| IgG | 4 (1–10) |
| IgA | 4 (1–10) |
| IgM | 8 (3–16) |
| IgG1 | 5 (2–12) |
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| IgG3 | 3 (1–9) |
| IgG4 | 5 (2–12) |
| C3 | 1 (0–6) |
| C4 | 3 (1–9) |