| Literature DB >> 35036396 |
Aleksandra Szczawińska-Popłonyk1, Elzbieta Grześk2, Eyal Schwartzmann3, Anna Materna-Kiryluk4, Jadwiga Małdyk5.
Abstract
Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) is a disorder characterized by a disruption of the lymphocyte apoptosis pathway, self-tolerance, and immune system homeostasis. Defects in genes within the first apoptosis signal (FAS)-mediated pathway cause an expansion of autoreactive double-negative T cells leading to non-malignant lymphoproliferation, autoimmune disorders, and an increased risk of lymphoma. The aim of the study was to show the diagnostic dilemmas and difficulties in the process of recognizing ALPS in the light of chronic active Epstein-Barr virus (CAEBV) infection. Clinical, immunological, flow cytometric, biomarkers, and molecular genetic approaches of a pediatric patient diagnosed with FAS-ALPS and CAEBV are presented. With the ever-expanding spectrum of molecular pathways associated with autoimmune lymphoproliferative disorders, multiple genetic defects of FAS-mediated apoptosis, primary immunodeficiencies with immune dysregulation, malignant and autoimmune disorders, and infections are included in the differential diagnosis. Further studies are needed to address the issue of the inflammatory and neoplastic role of CAEBV as a triggering and disease-modifying factor in ALPS.Entities:
Keywords: autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome; children; chronic active Epstein-Barr virus infection; immunodeficiency–primary; lymphoproliferation
Year: 2021 PMID: 35036396 PMCID: PMC8757380 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.798959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Clinical and laboratory workup according to the revised 2009 NIH and 2019 ESID diagnostic criteria for ALPS.
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Chronic (>6 months), non-malignant, non-infectious lymphadenopathy or splenomegaly or both Elevated CD3+TCRαβ+CD4-CD8- DNT cells (>1.5%) of total lymphocytes and (>2.5%) of CD3+ lymphocytes in the setting of normal or elevated lymphocyte counts |
Chronic (>3 years), non-malignant lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly Elevated CD3+TCRαβ+CD4-CD8- DNT cells 4.6–8.3% of total lymphocytes and 6.7–10.2% of CD3+ lymphocytes in the setting of normal lymphocyte counts (1950cc−2503cc) |
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Peripheral blood flow cytometric immunophenotyping.
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| Lymphocytes CD45+/SSC low | 58%, 1950cc | 43%, 2503cc | 29–46%, 1400–5500cc |
| B CD19+ | 10%, 209cc | 9%, 224cc | 8–39%, 180–1300cc |
| Transitional B CD19+CD38+IgM++ | 23.2%, 48cc | 18.4%, 41cc | 3.1–12.3%, 20–200cc |
| Mature na?ve B CD19+CD27-IgD+ | 80.0%, 167cc | 71.0%, 159cc | 54.0–88.4%, 280–1330cc |
| Non-switched memory B (MZL) CD19+CD27+IgD+ | 10.7%, 22cc | 8.0%, 20cc | 2.7–19.8%, 20–180cc |
| Switched memory B CD19+CD27+IgD- | 6.3%, 13cc | 5.0%, 11cc | 7–21.2%, 20–220cc |
| Immature B CD19+CD21lo | 9.1%, 19cc | 9.8%, 22cc | 4.1–24.4%, 20–230cc |
| Activated B CD19+CD38loCD21lo | 5.5%, 11cc | 8.2%, 18cc | 1.7–5.4%, 10–60cc |
| Plasmablasts CD19+CD38++IgM- | 0.0%, 0cc | 0.0%, 0cc | 0.6–4.0%, 10–50cc |
| T CD3+ | 74.0%, 1491cc | 77.0%, 1947cc | 52–92%, 850–4300cc |
| T CD3+CD4-CD8-TCR alpha/beta in lymph | 4.6%, 99cc | 8.3%, 207cc | <1% |
| T CD3+CD4-CD8-TCR alpha/beta in T lymph | 6.7%, 100cc | 10.2%,199cc | <1.5% |
| T helper CD3+CD4+ | 27.0%, 534cc | 28%, 719cc | 25–66%, 500–2700cc |
| T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+ | 34.0%, 674cc | 34%, 854cc | 9–49%, 200–1800cc |
| CD4+/CD8+ | 0.79 | 0.84 | 1.5–2.5 |
| Recent thymic emigrants CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD31+ | 57.0%, 304cc | 63.5%, 457cc | 37–100%, 190–2600cc |
| Naïve T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD27+ | 66.1%, 353cc | 71.3%, 513cc | 52–92%, 300–2300cc |
| Central memory T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA-CD27+ | 23.9%, 127cc | 19.5% 140cc | 15–56%, 160–660cc |
| Effector memory T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA-CD27- | 9.6%, 51cc | 5.7%, 41cc | 0.3–9%, 3–89cc |
| Terminally differentiated memory T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD27- | 0.4%, 2cc | 3.5%, 25cc | 0–1.2%, 0.0–16cc |
| Follicular CXCR5+ T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RO+CD185+ | 26.0%, 51cc | 32.8%, 60cc | 6–72%, 13–170cc |
| Regulatory T helper CD3+CD4+CD25++CD127- | 0.5%, 3cc | 1.6%, 11cc | 3–17%, 39–150cc |
| Naïve T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD27+CD197+ | 27.7%, 187cc | 32.1%, 274cc | 19–100%, 53–1100cc |
| Central memory T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD45RA-CD27+CD197+ | 1.2%, 8cc | 1.4%, 12cc | 1–9%, 4–64cc |
| Effector memory T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD45RA-CD27-CD197- | 7.4%, 50cc | 10.3%, 88cc | 10–55%, 24–590cc |
| Terminally differentiated T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD45RA+CD27-CD197- | 3.1%, 216cc | 12.6%, 108cc | 6–83%, 25–530cc |
| NK CD3-CD45+CD16+CD56+ | 5.0%, 106cc | 8.0%, 191cc | 2–25%, 61–510cc |
Genetic testing comprising 11 genes involved in immune dysregulation disorders.
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| Heterozygous pathogenic c.749G>A (p.Arg250Gln), aka R234Q | |
| The sequence change replaces arginine with glutamine at codon 250 of the FAS protein. The arginine residue is highly conserved and there is a small physicochemical difference between arginine and glutamine. Advanced modeling of protein sequence and biophysical properties (such as structural, functional, and spatial information, amino acid conservation, physicochemical variation, residue mobility, and thermodynamic stability) indicates that this missense variant disrupts the p.Arg250 amino acid residue in FAS and affects FAS protein function, and accordingly, this variant has been classified as pathogenic | |
Differential diagnosis of ALPS and overlapping lymphoproliferative conditions.
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EBV: VCA IgM 0.03 s/co negative, VCA IgG 50.73 s/co positive, EBNA IgG 9.65 s/co positive, EBV RT-PCR 554–1526 DNA copies/mL CMV, VZV, QuantFERON-TB: endogeneous IFN-γ 0.08 IU/mL, IFN-γ release by CD4+ T cells: 0.05 IU/mL, IFN-γ release by CD8+ T cells: 0.05 IU/mL, PHA-stimulated IFN-γ release: >10 IU/mL; negative |
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Coombs direct antiglobulin test: anti-IgG, anti-IgM, anti-IgA, anti-C3c, anti-C3d negative Anti-TG 2.3 IU/mL, anti-TPO <1.0 IU/mL, anti-TR negative Anti-tTG IgA, IgG negative ANA: nRNP/Sm, Sm, SS-A, Ro-52, SS-B, Scl-70, PM-Scl100, Jo-1, CENP B, PCNA, dsDNA, nucleosomes, histones, ribosomal protein P, AMA-M2 negative ANCA: proteinase-3, lactoferrin, myeloperoxidase, elastase, cathepsin G, BPI negative |
Figure 1Immunohistochemical staining of a biopsied lymph node with regressive lumps showing diffusely positive CD3+CD57+CD5+NK cells and numerous reactive CD4 positive T cells demonstrating a high proliferation index, and sparse EBER positive cells.
DN T-cells and EBV-DNA monitoring at 2-month intervals.
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| 1 | 6.7 | 100 | 86 |
| 2 | 10.2 | 195 | 554 |
| 3 | 0 | 0 | 20 |
| 4 | 15.2 | 306 | 1526 → anti-CD20 |
| 5 | 17.0 | 413 | 0 |
| 6 | 13.8 | 372 | 0 |