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Comparative Study
. 2019 Mar;7(3):864-878.e9.
doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2018.09.004. Epub 2018 Sep 19.

Comparison of Common Monogenic Defects in a Large Predominantly Antibody Deficiency Cohort

Reza Yazdani  1 Hassan Abolhassani  2 Fatemeh Kiaee  1 Sima Habibi  1 Gholamreza Azizi  3 Marzieh Tavakol  3 Zahra Chavoshzadeh  4 Seyed Alireza Mahdaviani  5 Tooba Momen  6 Mohammad Gharagozlou  7 Masoud Movahedi  7 Amir Ali Hamidieh  8 Nasrin Behniafard  9 Mohammamd Nabavi  10 Mohammad Hassan Bemanian  10 Saba Arshi  10 Rasol Molatefi  11 Roya Sherkat  12 Afshin Shirkani  13 Reza Amin  14 Soheila Aleyasin  14 Reza Faridhosseini  15 Farahzad Jabbari-Azad  15 Iraj Mohammadzadeh  16 Javad Ghaffari  17 Alireza Shafiei  18 Arash Kalantari  19 Mahboubeh Mansouri  20 Mehrnaz Mesdaghi  20 Delara Babaie  3 Hamid Ahanchian  15 Maryam Khoshkhui  15 Habib Soheili  21 Mohammad Hossein Eslamian  22 Taher Cheraghi  23 Abbas Dabbaghzadeh  16 Mahmoud Tavassoli  24 Rasoul Nasiri Kalmarzi  25 Seyed Hamidreza Mortazavi  26 Sara Kashef  14 Hossein Esmaeilzadeh  14 Javad Tafaroji  27 Abbas Khalili  28 Fariborz Zandieh  18 Mahnaz Sadeghi-Shabestari  29 Sepideh Darougar  4 Fatemeh Behmanesh  14 Hedayat Akbari  14 Mohammadreza Zandkarimi  15 Farhad Abolnezhadian  30 Abbas Fayezi  31 Mojgan Moghtaderi  14 Akefeh Ahmadiafshar  31 Behzad Shakerian  24 Vahid Sajedi  32 Behrang Taghvaei  33 Mojgan Safari  22 Marzieh Heidarzadeh  34 Babak Ghalebaghi  23 Seyed Mohammad Fathi  35 Behzad Darabi  36 Saeed Bazregari  13 Nasrin Bazargan  37 Morteza Fallahpour  10 Alireza Khayatzadeh  38 Naser Javahertrash  10 Bahram Bashardoust  4 Mohammadali Zamani  39 Azam Mohsenzadeh  40 Sarehsadat Ebrahimi  7 Samin Sharafian  7 Ahmad Vosughimotlagh  7 Mitra Tafakoridelbari  7 Maziar Rahim  7 Parisa Ashournia  7 Anahita Razaghian  7 Arezou Rezaei  1 Ashraf Samavat  41 Setareh Mamishi  42 Hossein Ali Khazaei  43 Javad Mohammadi  44 Babak Negahdari  45 Nima Parvaneh  1 Nima Rezaei  1 Vassilios Lougaris  46 Silvia Giliani  47 Alessandro Plebani  46 Hans D Ochs  48 Lennart Hammarström  49 Asghar Aghamohammadi  50
Affiliations
Comparative Study

Comparison of Common Monogenic Defects in a Large Predominantly Antibody Deficiency Cohort

Reza Yazdani et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2019 Mar.

Erratum in

  • Erratum.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2021 May;9(5):2134. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2021.03.001. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2021. PMID: 33966876 No abstract available.

Abstract

Background: Predominantly antibody deficiencies (PADs) are the most common primary immunodeficiencies, characterized by hypogammaglobulinemia and inability to generate effective antibody responses.

Objective: We intended to report most common monogenic PADs and to investigate how patients with PAD who were primarily diagnosed as suffering from agammaglobulinemia, hyper-IgM (HIgM) syndrome, and common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) have different clinical and immunological findings.

Methods: Stepwise next-generation sequencing and Sanger sequencing were performed for confirmation of the mutations in the patients clinically diagnosed as suffering from agammaglobulinemia, HIgM syndrome, and CVID.

Results: Among 550 registered patients, the predominant genetic defects associated with agammaglobulinemia (48 Bruton's tyrosine kinase [BTK] and 6 μ heavy chain deficiencies), HIgM syndrome (21 CD40 ligand and 7 activation-induced cytidine deaminase deficiencies), and CVID (17 lipopolysaccharides-responsive beige-like anchor deficiency and 12 atypical Immunodeficiency, Centromeric instability, and Facial dysmorphism syndromes) were identified. Clinical disease severity was significantly higher in patients with μ heavy chain and CD40 ligand mutations compared with patients with BTK (P = .003) and activation-induced cytidine deaminase (P = .009) mutations. Paralysis following live polio vaccination was considerably higher in patients with μ heavy chain deficiency compared with BTK deficiency (P < .001). We found a genotype-phenotype correlation among patients with BTK mutations regarding clinical manifestation of meningitis and chronic diarrhea. Surprisingly, we noticed that first presentations in most patients with Immunodeficiency, Centromeric instability, and Facial dysmorphism were respiratory complications (P = .008), whereas first presentations in patients with lipopolysaccharides-responsive beige-like anchor deficiency were nonrespiratory complications (P = .008).

Conclusions: This study highlights similarities and differences in the clinical and genetic spectrum of the most common PAD-associated gene defects. This comprehensive comparison will facilitate clinical decision making, and improve prognosis and targeted treatment.

Keywords: Agammaglobulinemia; Common variable immunodeficiency; Hyper-IgM syndrome; Next-generation sequencing; Primary antibody deficiencies; Primary immunodeficiency; Sanger sequencing.

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