| Literature DB >> 35003071 |
Scott M Gordon1, Amy E O'Connell2.
Abstract
Due to heightened awareness and advanced genetic tools, inborn errors of immunity (IEI) are increasingly recognized in children. However, diagnosing of IEI in premature infants is challenging and, subsequently, reports of IEI in premature infants remain rare. This review focuses on how common disorders of prematurity, such as sepsis, necrotizing enterocolitis, and bronchopulmonary dysplasia, can clinically overlap with presenting signs of IEI. We present four recent cases from a single neonatal intensive care unit that highlight diagnostic dilemmas facing neonatologists and clinical immunologists when considering IEI in preterm infants. Finally, we present a conceptual framework for when to consider IEI in premature infants and a guide to initial workup of premature infants suspected of having IEI.Entities:
Keywords: autoinflamatory diseases; herpes simplex virus; inborn errors of immunity; infection; necrotizing entercolitis; prematurity; primary immunodeficiency; sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35003071 PMCID: PMC8738084 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.758373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Features of prematurity that may suggest IEI.
| Clinical Scenario | Reason to Consider IEI | Suggested Evaluation |
|---|---|---|
| Severe HSV | Mutations in TLR3, the complement pathway, and | Whole exome sequencing (WES). ( |
| RSV requiring ECMO or recurrent severe RSV | T cell immunodeficiencies have been associated with severe disease. | T/B/NK cell panel, consider SCID genetic panel if abnormal. |
| Recurrent severe bacterial infections | Can be a hallmark of a wide variety of IEIs | Consider T/B/NK cell panel, mitogen testing, DHR testing for CGD, immunoglobulins, additional functional and genetic testing depending on scenario |
| Hepatomegaly with cytopenias | Can be seen with autoinflammatory disorders | Inflammasomopathy panel*, HLH gene panel |
| Necrotizing enterocolitis – recurrent or with prolonged wound healing | NEC has immunologic component, severe cases might suggest IEI | Consider T/B/NK cell panel, mitogen testing, DHR testing for CGD, immunoglobulins; consider WES |
| Persistent diarrhea or colitis | VEO-IBD and a variety of other IEIs can present in neonatal period. | VEO-IBD genetic panel, genetic screening for congenital diarrheas. Also consider genetic testing for autoinflammatory diseases, IPEX, XIAP. |
| Bronchopulmonary dysplasia | Not a clear link with IEI, but BPD may cause thymic atrophy and secondary T cell lymphopenia | Consider immune evaluation for recurrent sinopulmonary infections (Igs, B cells, CGD, complement) |
| Low T cell receptor excision circles (TRECs) | Hallmark of severe combined immunodeficiency | Repeat up to twice in premature infants, if still abnormal do T/B/NK cell panel. If flow cytometry is abnormal, equivocal, or unable to be done move to genetic testing or WES. |
*For example, Invitae offers an Autoinflammatory and Autoimmunity Syndromes Panel that includes 115 different genes associated with inflammasomopathies and autoinflammatory disorders. The authors do not endorse any particular lab or vendor.
Clinical infectious history and risk of IEI in premature infants.
| Infection History | Clinical Guidance |
|---|---|
| Recurrent tracheitis or ventilator-associated pneumonia | Very common in premature infants ( |
| Recurrent sepsis | 20% of extremely premature infants (<29weeks) will have sepsis during their NICU admission ( |
| Fungal infection | Candidal infections are common in premature infants ( |
| Unusual bacteria | Gram positive infections are the most common causes of late onset sepsis in the NICU. Atypical gram positive organisms like |
| Unusual infection sites | Bloodstream infections, pneumonia, urinary tract infections, meningitis, osteomyelitis, and intraabdominal abscesses (in the setting of necrotizing enterocolitis) are all relatively common in premature infants. Abscesses in other locations and disseminated bacterial skin infections are unusual and evaluation for IEI should be considered*. |
| Osteomyelitis or septic arthritis | Typical of premature infants, particularly if |
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*Consider evaluation for IEI after reviewing the case context and whether there are clear contributing factors to infection or other concerns for genetic disease (nosocomial outbreak, sick parental contact, other concerning clinical features of the infant, etc).