| Literature DB >> 35160055 |
Alexis Piedrafita1,2, François Vergez3,4, Julie Belliere1,2,4, Nais Prades3, Magali Colombat4,5, Antoine Huart1, Jean-Baptiste Rieu3, Stéphanie Lagarde3, Arnaud Del Bello1,4, Nassim Kamar1,4, Dominique Chauveau1,2,4, Camille Laurent4,5, Lucie Oberic5, Loïc Ysebaert4,6, David Ribes1, Stanislas Faguer1,2,4.
Abstract
Large granular T-cell leukemia is a clonal hematological condition often associated with autoimmune disorders. Whether small-sized T-cell clones that are otherwise asymptomatic can promote immune kidney disorders remains elusive. In this monocentric retrospective cohort in a tertiary referral center in France, we reviewed characteristics of 29 patients with T-cell clone proliferation and autoimmune kidney disorders. Next-generation sequencing of the T-cell receptor of circulating T-cells was performed in a subset of patients. The T-cell clones were detected owing to systematic screening (mean count 0.32 × 109/L, range 0.13-3.7). Strikingly, a common phenotype of acute interstitial nephropathy was observed in 22 patients (median estimated glomerular filtration rate at presentation of 22 mL/min/1.73 m2 (range 0-56)). Kidney biopsies showed polymorphic inflammatory cell infiltration (predominantly CD3+ T-cells, most of them demonstrating positive phospho-STAT3 staining) and non-necrotic granuloma in six cases. Immune-mediated glomerulopathy only or in combination with acute interstitial nephropathy was identified in eight patients. Next-generation sequencing (n = 13) identified a major T-cell clone representing more than 1% of the T-cell population in all but two patients. None had a mutation of STAT3. Twenty patients (69%) had two or more extra-kidney autoimmune diseases. Acute interstitial nephropathies were controlled with corticosteroids, cyclosporin A, or tofacitinib. Thus, we showed that small-sized T-cell clones (i.e., without lymphocytosis) undetectable without specific screening are associated with various immune kidney disorders, including a previously unrecognized phenotype characterized by severe inflammatory kidney fibrosis and lymphocytic JAK/STAT activation.Entities:
Keywords: STAT3; T-cell receptor; autoimmune disorders; immunoclones; large granular lymphocytic leukemia; renal fibrosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35160055 PMCID: PMC8836922 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Flow-chart of the study. TIC, T-cell immunoclone; TCUS, T-cell clone of unknown significance; FSGS, focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis; MN, membranous nephropathy; GN, glomerulonephritis. * One patient had both acute interstitial nephropathy and immune-mediated glomerulopathy.
Characteristics of the 29 patients with TIC and kidney involvement.
| Pt | Age | Kidney Disease | Extra-Kidney Disorders | Clone Size | Treatment | eGFR at Last Follow-Up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 70 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Tissue | Cst | CR | |
| 2 | 62 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | 23% | Cst, RTX | CR | |
| 3 | 55 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Thyroiditis, cholangitis | Tissue | Cst | ESKD |
| 4 | 78 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia | 16% | CsA | Stable |
| 5 | 79 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Hepatitis, chronic neutropenia | 27% | None | Early death |
| 6 | 52 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Psoriasis | 20% | None | Loss of follow-up |
| 7 | 71 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Interstitial lung disease | 31% | Cst | Steroid dependency |
| 8 | 76 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Psoriatic arthritis, pleura infiltration | 27% | Leflunomide, HCQ, | Stable |
| 9 | 49 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Tissue | Cst | ESKD | |
| 10 | 35 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Uveitis | 11% | Cst, CsA | CR |
| 11 | 52 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | IgG4 syndrome | 12% | Cst, RTX | Steroid dependency |
| 12 | 48 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Tissue | Cst | CR | |
| 13 | 67 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | 15% | Cst | CR | |
| 14 | 81 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | 31% | Cst | CR | |
| 15 | 50 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | 14% | Cst, CsA | CR | |
| 16 | 66 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | IgG4 syndrome | 22% | Cst, RTX | CR |
| 17 | 69 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Bullous pemphigoid, cholangitis | 42% | Cst, CsA | CR |
| 18 | 69 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Sjögren syndrome, myasthenia, | 20% | Cst, RTX | Stable |
| 19 | 56 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Myositis | 14% | Cst, CsA | ESKD |
| 20 | 46 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Uveitis, scleritis, | 21% | Cst | CR |
| 21 | 77 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Immune thrombocytopenia, | 27% | Cst, RTX, IgIV, CsA, Tofacitinib | CR |
| 22 | 84 | Acute interstitial nephropathy | Anemia, thrombocytopenia | 17% | CSt, CsA | No |
| 23 | 75 | Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis | 23% | CsA | CR | |
| 72 | Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis | 21% | Cst, CsA | CR | ||
| 24 | 67 | Focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis | 22% | Cst, | Steroid dependency | |
| 25 | 43 | PLA2R+ membranous nephropathy | Immune thrombocytopenia | 7% | RTX | CR |
| 26 | 71 | PLA2R+ membranous nephropathy | Polymyalgia rheumatica | 14% | RTX | CR |
| 27 | 76 | PLA2R+ membranous nephropathy | Granulomatous hepatitis | 12% | None | Loss of follow-up |
| 28 | 58 | Minimal change disease | Rheumatoid arthritis | 25% | Cst, RTX, CsA | CR |
| 29 | 44 | DNAJB9+ fibrillary glomerulonephritis | Myositis | 19% | None | Stable |
Pt, patient; CR, complete response; Cst, corticosteroids; RTX, rituximab; CsA, ciclosporin-A; HCQ, hydroxychloroquine; MTX, methotrexate; TNFa, tumor necrosis factor-alpha; ESKD, end-stage kidney disease; IgIV, intravenous immunoglobulins; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate.
Figure 2Kidney pathology. (A) Acute interstitial nephropathy with polymorphic infiltration of inflammatory cells and interstitial edema (Masson’s trichroma). (B) Interstitial granuloma (Masson’s trichroma). (C–E) Glomerulonephritis with CD3+ T-cells’ endocapillary proliferation ((C) Masson’s trichroma staining, (D) Jones’ staining, (E) CD3+ immunostaining in brown). (F) Membranous nephropathy with extra-capillary cell proliferation (Masson’s trichroma).
Figure 3Phospho-STAT3 immunostaining. (A,B) Representative cases of pSTAT3 staining in renal fibrosis showing nuclear expression in some lymphocytes and endothelial cells (A ×150 and B ×100). (C,D) Representative cases of pSTAT3 staining in a liver sample expressed by numerous lymphocytes and hepatocytes (C ×200) or highlighting the intra-sinusoidal T-LGL infiltrate (D ×150). (E,F) Representative cases of pSTAT3 staining in inflammatory fibrosis tissue (E ×100) and sarcoidosis-like lymph node (F ×150) showing nuclear expression mostly in reactive lymphocytes (D) and histiocytes (F) as well as in endothelial cells.