Anti-cytokine autoantibodies preceding onset of autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type I features in early childhood
- PMID: 24158785
- DOI: 10.1007/s10875-013-9938-6
Anti-cytokine autoantibodies preceding onset of autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type I features in early childhood
Abstract
Purpose: Almost all patients with autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome (APS)-I have high titer neutralizing autoantibodies to type I interferons (IFN), especially IFN-ω and IFN-α2, whatever their clinical features and onset-ages. About 90 % also have antibodies to interleukin (IL)-17A, IL-17F and/or IL-22; they correlate with the chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) that affects ~90 % of patients. Our aim was to explore how early the manifestations and endocrine and cytokine autoantibodies appear in young APS-I patients. That may hold clues to very early events in the autoimmunization process in these patients.
Methods: Clinical investigations and autoantibody measurements in 13 APS-I patients sampled before age 7 years, and 3 pre-symptomatic siblings with AIRE-mutations in both alleles.
Results: Antibody titers were already high against IFN-α2 and IFN-ω at age 6 months in one sibling-8 months before onset of APS-I-and also against IL-22 at 7 months in another (still unaffected at age 5 years). In 12 of the 13 APS-I patients, antibody levels were high against IFN-ω and/or IL-22 when first tested, but only modestly positive against IFN-ω in one patient who had only hypo-parathyroidism. Endocrine organ-specific antibodies were present at age 6 months in one sibling, and as early as 36 and 48 months in two of the six informative subjects.
Conclusion: This is the first study to collate the onset of clinical features, cytokine and endocrine autoantibodies in APS-I infants and siblings. The highly restricted early autoantibody responses and clinical features they show are not easily explained by mere loss of broad-specific self-tolerance inducing mechanisms, but hint at some more sharply focused early event(s) in autoimmunization.
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