| Literature DB >> 35767111 |
Stefano Giardino1, Stefano Volpi2, Federica Lucioni3, Roberta Caorsi2, Jennifer Schneiderman4, Abigail Lang4, Amer Khojah4, Taco Kuijpers5, Ionanna Papadatou6, Anna Paisiou7, Laura Alonso8, Ansgar Schulz9, Nufar Marcus10,11,12, Marco Gattorno2, Maura Faraci13.
Abstract
Mutations in the ARPC1B isoform component of human actin-related protein 2/3 complex have been recently associated with an inborn error of immunity characterized by combined immunodeficiency, allergies, autoinflammation, and platelet abnormalities. Currently, indications on the management of this novel disease and information on its outcome are lacking. We report the first case series of 7 children with a homozygous mutation in ARPC1B gene who underwent allogeneic-HSCT (allo-HSCT). All patients presented an early clinical onset, characterized by recurrent infections, failure to thrive and gastrointestinal bleeding episodes complicated with neonatal hemorrhagic enteritis in 3 cases, and macrophage activating syndrome in 2. Allo-HSCT was performed at the median age of 1.83 years after a myeloablative conditioning regimen in all cases. Engraftment occurred in all patients with full donor chimerism in 6 out of 7. The clinical course after engraftment was uneventful in 3 out of 7 children; 2 patients developed a grade 1-2 acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), and 1 patient a grade 1 chronic-GvHD. JC virus-related progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy was diagnosed in one patient 13 months after haploidentical-HSCT and successfully managed with donor-derived viral-specific T-cell infusion. Only one patient had a fatal outcome 3 months after HSCT because of sepsis, after veno-occlusive disease, and transplant-associated microangiopathy. At a median follow-up of 19 months (range 3-110), 6 out of 7 patients are alive and disease-free. The severity of the clinical phenotype at diagnosis and the high survival rate, with limited transplant-related morbidity, strongly support the indication to allo-HSCT for patients with this diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: ARPC1B deficiency; Allogenic-HSCT; Autoinflammatory disease; Primary immunodeficiency
Year: 2022 PMID: 35767111 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-022-01305-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317