| Literature DB >> 35795667 |
Sanchi Chawla1, Prabal Barman1, Rahul Tyagi1, Ankur Kumar Jindal1, Saniya Sharma1, Amit Rawat1, Surjit Singh1.
Abstract
Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is the most common symptomatic primary immunodeficiency (PID). CVID is a heterogenous condition and clinical manifestations may vary from increased susceptibility to infections to autoimmune manifestations, granulomatous disease, polyclonal lymphoproliferation, and increased risk of malignancy. Autoimmune manifestations may, at times, be the first and only clinical presentation of CVID, resulting in diagnostic dilemma for the treating physician. Autoimmune cytopenias (autoimmune haemolytic anaemia and/or thrombocytopenia) are the most common autoimmune complications seen in patients with CVID. Laboratory investigations such as antinuclear antibodies, direct Coomb's test and anti-platelet antibodies may not be useful in patients with CVID because of lack of specific antibody response. Moreover, presence of autoimmune cytopenias may pose a significant therapeutic challenge as use of immunosuppressive agents can be contentious in these circumstances. It has been suggested that serum immunoglobulins must be checked in all patients presenting with autoimmune cytopenia such as immune thrombocytopenia or autoimmune haemolytic anaemia. It has been observed that patients with CVID and autoimmune cytopenias have a different clinical and immunological profile as compared to patients with CVID who do not have an autoimmune footprint. Monogenic defects have been identified in 10-50% of all patients with CVID depending upon the population studied. Monogenic defects are more likely to be identified in patients with CVID with autoimmune complications. Common genetic defects that may lead to CVID with an autoimmune phenotype include nuclear factor kappa B subunit 1 (NF-kB1), Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-responsive beige-like anchor protein (LRBA), cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA4), Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), inducible T-cell costimulatory (ICOS), IKAROS and interferon regulatory factor-2 binding protein 2 (IRF2BP2). In this review, we update on recent advances in pathophysiology and management of CVID with autoimmune cytopenias.Entities:
Keywords: B cell activating factor (BAFF); B cells; autoimmune cytopenia (AIC); common variable immunodeficiency (CVID); cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CLTA-4); inducible T cell co-stimulator (ICOS); lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-responsive beige-like anchor protein (LRBA)
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35795667 PMCID: PMC9251126 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.869466
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Review of studies that have reported the clinical phenotype of autoimmune cytopenia in CVID.
| Author, year, country | Number of patients[x/y]# | Sex ratio(M: F) | Age at diagnosis (years) | Salient findings | Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hermaszewsky et al., 1993, UK ( | 40/240 | NA | Biphasic(1-5; 16-20) | 12 CVID patients had AIHA, 6 had ITP, 4 had pernicious anaemia and 18 had neutropeniaThrombocytopenia was mild and nearly half of these patients had splenomegalyNeutropenic patients had poor prognosis because of increased infections | Splenectomy was performed in 5 and 2 patients with AIHA and ITP respectively |
| Cunningham-Rundles et al., 1999, USA ( | 32/248 | 51:73(15:17) | 29 (Male)33 (Female) | Females had a higher predisposition for autoimmunity including cytopenia15 patients had ITP, 12 had AIHA, 3 had pernicious anaemia, 2 had autoimmune neutropenia, 5 had Evan’s syndrome | IVIg and short course steroids |
| Kainulainen et a.l, 2001, Finland ( | 10/95 | 52:43 | 33 | Eighteen (19%) patients with CVID had autoimmune manifestations; pernicious anaemia was the commonest (6%) followed by ITP (3%) and AIHA (1%) | NA |
| Kokron et al., 2004, Brazil ( | 3/71 | 38:33 | 15-78 | 2 patients had haemolytic anaemia, while 1 had pernicious anaemia; 1 female patient had both haemolytic anaemia and Sjoügren Syndrome and 1 male patient had atrophic gastritis and pernicious anaemia | IVIg |
| Michel et al., 2004, France ( | 21/21 | 4:3 | 27 (10-74) | The median age at AITP diagnosis was earlier than the diagnosis of CVIDCVID was diagnosed before the onset of AITP in only 4 patients (19%). It was diagnosed more than 6 months after AITP in 13 cases (62%), and the 2 conditions were diagnosed concomitantly in 4 cases11 patients (52%) had at least 1 autoimmune manifestation other than AITP, among which AIHA (7 cases) and autoimmune neutropenia (5 cases) were more common | The commonest treatment included steroids and IVIg (1-2g/kg). 6 patients needed additional therapy including azathioprine, vincristine and cyclophosphamide4 patients underwent splenectomy for AITP (2 had complete remission and 2 failed to respond). Two patients underwent splenectomy for Evans syndrome |
| Wang et al., 2005, USA ( | 35/326 | 16:19 | 5-66 | 19 (54%) patients had the 1st episode of thrombocytopenia or haemolytic anaemia prior to the diagnosis of CVID, 11 (32%) were diagnosed concurrently, and 5 (14%) developed one or both of these autoimmune diseases following the diagnosis of CVID; 8 patients with cytopenia also had granulomas | Treatment included corticosteroids, anti-Rh immunoglobulin, and intravenous immunoglobulinEleven patients underwent splenectomy |
| Carbone et al., 2006, Spain ( | 3/14 | 4:3 | 37.4(21-68) | 2 patients had ITP and 1 had AIHA | NA |
| Alachkar et al., 2006, UK ( | NA/34 | 25:9 | 25 (8-51) | Reduced switched memory B cells was associated with a significantly higher prevalence of bronchiectasis, splenomegaly and autoimmunity | NA |
| Quinti et al., 2007, Italy ( | 97/224* | 48:49 | 26.6 (2-73) | At the time of diagnosis of CVID, autoimmune diseases were the only features in 2.3% of patients while in 11.1% autoimmune diseases were associated with recurrent infections | Steroids and splenectomy (more details NA) |
| Chapel et al., 2008, UK, Sweden, Germany, France, Czech Republic ( | 40/334 | 1.4:1 | 33 | There was a statistically significant correlation of splenomegaly with cytopenias, hepatomegaly, and granulomata, but not with solid organ–specific autoimmunity | NA |
| Wehr et al., 2008, UK, Germany, France, Spain, Netherlands and Czech Republic ( | 43/303 | 133:169 | 35 (3-74) | The age of onset of immunodeficiency was delayed in CVID patients with autoimmune manifestations although it was not statistically significant because of low numbers; majority had ITP (64%), followed by AIHA (25%), and 11% had Evan’s syndrome; nine patients had pernicious anaemia; There was no difference between genders; autoimmune cytopenia had significant associations with splenomegaly and granulomatous disease | NA |
| Ardeniz et al., 2009, Turkey/USA ( | 19/37 | 13:24 | 26 (2-59) | 7 patients with autoimmune cytopenia also had granulomas (lung and liver) as the predominant manifestation | Steroids used most commonly; 2 patients received cyclosporin, 1 infliximab and 1 rituximab |
| Mouillot et al., 2010, France ( | 55/313 | 0.9:1 | 45 (33-56) | Correlation was noted between decreased switched memory B cells, decrease in naive CD4+ T cells and increase in CD4+CD95+ cells with lymphoproliferation, autoimmune cytopenia, or chronic enteropathyIn addition, lymphoproliferation and cytopenia patients had increase in CD21low B cells and CD4+HLA-DR+ T cells and decreased regulatory T cell | NA |
| Boileau et., 2011, France ( | 55/311 | 29:26 | 29 (16-46) | 41 patients (74%) had ITP, 17 patients (31%) had AIHA and 10 patients (18%) had neutropenia. 36 patients in this group developed splenomegaly (65%) and 8 patients developed a granulomatous disease (14%); a significant correlation was found between an increased proportion of CD21low B cells and CVID associated autoimmune cytopenia; in CVID associated autoimmune cytopenia, T cells display an activated phenotype with an increase of HLA-DR and CD95 expression and a decrease in the naïve T cell numbers | NA |
| Maarschalk-Ellerbroek et al., 2012, Netherlands ( | 9/61 | 25:36 | 27 (14-43) | At diagnosis, 3 patients had cytopenia (AIHA/ITP), and it increased to 9 at follow-up (median 7 years); splenomegaly seen in 8 patients; low switched memory B cells associated with autoimmunity, splenomegaly and granulomas | NA |
| Arshi et al., 2016, Iran ( | 21/47 | 1:1 | 27 (4-63) | ITP was the commonest manifestation (26%) followed by AIHA (15%) and pernicious anaemia (4%)Autoimmunity occurred in older age group (mean 14.2 years) and was associated with parental consanguinity (57%) | IVIg in all and splenectomy in 3 patients with ITP |
| Patuzzo et al., 2016, Italy ( | 10/10 | 1:4 | 44.8 (±12) | Patients with CVID and AITP had a higher percentage of CD21low cells | NA |
| Arduini et al., 2016, Ireland ( | 2/23 | 13:10 | 22-82 | 1 patient had AIHA, ITP and neutropenia; 1 patient had pernicious anaemiaPeripheral mucosal-associated invariant T cell activation is a feature of CVID and depletion of these cells is particularly associated with complications including autoimmunity | NA |
| Çalişkaner et al., 2016, Turkey ( | 3/25 | 12:13 | 36.6 (± 13.4) | 3 patients had ITP (2 had splenomegaly and 1 required splenectomy) | IVIg and steroid |
| Almejun et al., 2017, Argentina ( | 5/25 | 12:13 | 11.3 (4-16.1) | Severe altered somatic hypermutation in addition to low switched memory B cells has a correlation with autoimmunity, splenomegaly and granulomas | NA |
| Feuille et al., 2017, USA (USIDNET Registry) ( | 101/990 | 52:49 | 16 (10-31) | The most common autoimmune cytopenia was ITP (N = 73), followed by haemolytic anaemia (N = 45), and autoimmune neutropenia (N = 10); There was no significant difference in the age at diagnosis, gender, and baseline Ig values between the group with autoimmune cytopenia and those without cytopenia; autoimmune cytopenia group was more likely to have lymphoproliferation, granulomatous disease, lymphomas, hepatic disease, interstitial lung diseases, enteropathy, and organ-specific autoimmunity | NA |
| Guffroy et al., 2017, France ( | 16/473 | 1.7:1 | 17 (4-63) | Frequency of neutropenia 3.4%.16 patients had neutropenia and 11 of them were AINFive patients died during the follow-up (11 years) with an increased percentage of deaths in patients with neutropenia | Specific treatment for neutropenia was in general not administered, except in 3 patients who received G-CSF |
| Alkan et al., 2018, Turkey ( | 2/12 | 7:5 | 11.6 ( ± 3.7) | 2 patients had Evans syndrome and splenomegalyBoth patients with cytopenias were diagnosed after 10 years | NA |
| Ghorbani et al., 2019, Iran ( | 18/220 | 1.2:1 | 9.5 (3.9-18.25)5 (1.8-10)** | Frequency of neutropenia was 8.1%; Candida infection and septicaemia were significantly higher in neutropenic patients; the most prominent clinical phenotypes of CVID patients with neutropenia were polyclonal lymphocytic infiltration and autoimmunityThe mortality rate in neutropenic patients was higher than in patients without neutropenia (61.1 vs. 25.2%, p=0.004) | IVIg and prophylactic antibiotics for neutropeniaG-CSF and splenectomy were considered in 1 and 2 patients respectively |
| Mormille et al., 2021, Italy ( | 17/95 | 9:8 | 24-76 | The most common autoimmune manifestation was cytopenia (17.8%); the most common cytopenia was immune thrombocytopenia, reported in 10 out of 95 patients (10.5%), followed by autoimmune haemolytic anaemia (n=3, 3.1%) and autoimmune neutropenia (n=3, 3.1%); almost all patients with autoimmune cytopenia had splenomegaly (15 out of 17; 88%)There was no statistically siginificant difference in CD3+, CD8+, CD4+CD25highCD127low T reg, CD19, CD19hiCD21loCD38lo, and follicular T helper cells in CVID patients with or without autoimmune manifestations | IVIg and steroid1 patient underwent splenectomy |
NA, not available; CVID, common variable immunodeficiency; IVIg, Intravenous immunoglobulin; G-CSF, Granulocyte colony stimulating factor.
#x: no. of autoimmune cytopenia patients, y: total no. of CVID patients.
*97 patients had autoimmune manifestations (exact number of patients with autoimmune cytopenic not reported).
**Neutropenic patients with CVID.
Review of studies that have reported the immunopathogenesis of autoimmune cytopenia in CVID.
| Author, year, country | Title | N | Technique used | Salient Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| G. Azizi et al., 2017; Iran ( | Autoimmunity and its association with regulatory T cells and B cell subsets in patients with common variable immunodeficiency | 72 | Flowcytometric evaluation of T and B cell compartment | Higher transitional MZ B cells in patients with CVID with autoimmune cytopeniaLower percentage of naive and non-class-switched memory B cells were seen in patients with CVID with autoimmunityPatients with CVID with multiple autoimmune syndromes had higher level of CD3+ T cells, CD4+ T cells and CD21low B cells and lower number of T regs and naïve B cell when compared with patients with CVID with one autoimmune syndrome |
| Warnatz et al., 2002; Germany ( | Severe deficiency of switched memory B cells (CD271IgM2IgD2) in subgroupsof patients with common variable immunodeficiency: a new approach toclassify a heterogeneous disease | 38 (30 CVID; 22 HC) | Flowcytometry | Reduced class switched memory B cells (<0.4%) and increased CD21low B cells (>20%) in patients with autoimmune cytopenia |
| E. Kofod-Olsen et al; 2016., Denmark ( | Altered fraction of regulatory B and T cells is correlated with autoimmune phenomena and splenomegaly in patients with CVID | 34; 11(HC) | Flowcytometry:Intracellular IL-10 expression analysisIntracellular FoxP3 expression analysisT cell suppression assay | Pronounced Reduction in Tregs in patients with CVID with autoimmunityrTregs (resting) were significantly reduced in the autoimmunity grouppatients had a significant reduction in CTLA-4 expression in all subsets except the rTregsSignificantly high expression of pro-B10 cells in autoimmunity group |
| Genre et al., 2009; Brazil ( | Reduced frequency of CD4+CD25HIGHFOXP3+ cells and diminished FOXP3 expression in patients with Common Variable Immunodeficiency:A link to autoimmunity? | 33, 30(HC) | Flow cytometric analysisRT PCR of FOXP3 | Decrease of absolute CD4+ lymphocytes numberslower frequency of CD4+CD25HIGHFOXP3+ cells in patients with AI with CVID than without AIReduced FOXP3 mRNA levels in Tregs of patients with CVID (Higher Reduction in AI+CVID group) |
| Tahiat A et al., 2014; Algeria ( | Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID): clinical and immunological features of 29 Algerian patients | 29 | Flowcytometry | Decreased circulating B (54.2%) and T CD4+ (41.7%) cells and inversion of the CD4/CD8 ratio (70.8%). Patients with decreased circulating B and T CD4+ cells were significantly more likely to have auto-immune cytopenias and lymphoproliferative disease. |
| Mouillot G, et al., 2010 ( | B-Cell and T-Cell Phenotypes in CVID Patients Correlate with the Clinical Phenotype of the Disease. | 313; 50(HC) | Flowcytometry | Reduced smB cells, Increased CD21low B cellsSignificant reduction in activated T cells (CD4+and CD95+ T cells) (AC>IO group)Reduced CD4+ and HLADR+ T cells and Tregs |
| Romberg et al., 2019 ( | CVID patients with autoimmune cytopenias exhibit hyperplastic yet inefficient germinal centre responses | 14 CVID+AIC and 4 CVID-AIC patients. | Flowcytometry | CVID+AIC patients displayed irregularly-shaped, hyperplastic germinal centres (GCs), whereas GCs were scarce and small in CVID-AIC patients evidenced by an increase in circulating T follicular helper cells, which correlated with decreased regulatory T cell frequencies and function |
MZ, Marginal Zone; RT PCR, Polymerase chain reaction; Tregs, regulatory T cells; HC, Healthy controls; rTregs, Resting regulatory T cell; aTregs, Activated regulatory T cells; CTLA4, Cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated protein 4; pro-B10, regulatory B cells; AI, Autoimmunity; smB, Switched memory B cells; AIC, Autoimmune cytopenia; GC, Germinal Centre; IO, Infection Only.
Figure 1shows most important immune abnormalities that have been reported in patients with CVID with autoimmune cytopenia. Shown in the right panel are an increased CD21lo B cell and B regulatory cells; decreased switched memory B cells and T regulatory cells; hyperplastic germinal centre and altered somatic hypermutation. CD21lo: CD21-/LOW B cells; smB, switched memory B cells; Breg, B regulatory cells; Treg, T regulatory cells; DC, Dendritic Cells; GC, germinal centre.
Figure 2shows various genes and downstream pathways that are involved in pathogenesis of autoimmune cytopenia in patients with CVID. ICOS, Inducible T cell costimulator; ICOS-L, Inducible costimulator ligand; CTLA-4, Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte associated protein 4; LRBA, Lipopolysaccharide responsive beige anchor protein; CD28, Cluster of Differentiation 28; CD80, Cluster of Differentiation 80; CD86, Cluster of Differentiation 86; PIK3Cδ, Phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate 3-kinase δ; PIP2, Phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate; PIP3, Phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-trisphosphate; Akt, ‘Ak’ strain ‘thymoma’ protein; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; PTEN, PI3K regulatory subunit α; TCR, T cell receptor; MHCII, major histocompatibility complex Class II; NFκB1, Nuclear factor kappa B1; NFκB2, Nuclear factor kappa B2; BCR, B cell Receptor; BAFF, B cell activating factor; BAFF-R, B cell activating factor receptor; APRIL, A proliferation- inducing ligand; PLCγ2, Phospholipase C gamma 2; TACI, Transmembrane activator and calcium modulator and cyclophilin ligand interactor; CD19, Cluster of differentiation 19; CD81, Cluster of differentiation 81; TLR, Toll like receptor; Igα, Immunoglobulin alpha; Igβ, Immunoglobulin beta.