Memory Switched B Cell Percentage and Not Serum Immunoglobulin Concentration Is Associated With Clinical Complications in Children and Adults With Specific Antibody Deficiency and Common Variable Immunodeficiency

  • Bonilla F
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Abstract

Alachkar H, Taubenheim N, Haeney MR, Durandy A, Arkwright PD. Clin Immunol. 2006;120:310–318PURPOSE OF THE STUDY. To compare the associations of clinical complications of antibody deficiency with (1) measures of memory B-cell development and (2) serum immunoglobulin (Ig) concentrations.STUDY POPULATION. Twenty-seven children (aged 2–16 years) and 28 adults (aged 22–65 years) with diagnoses of specific antibody deficiency defined as having normal Ig levels and impaired responses to pneumococcal immunization (specific antibody deficiency [SAD], 21 patients) or common variable immunodeficiency defined as hypogammaglobulinemia with more generally impaired vaccine responses (common variable immunodeficiency [CVID]; 34 patients) were studied. Nineteen patients who underwent evaluation and were found to have normal Ig levels and fully intact vaccine responses served as a “control” group.METHODS. Serum Ig levels were measured by standard clinical laboratory methods; memory B-cell populations were assessed by flow cytometry using labeled monoclonal antibodies to detect cell-surface CD19, CD27, and IgD. (CD19 is a marker for all B cells. CD27 is a marker for the memory subset of cells. Cells that do not express IgD have undergone class-switching and express IgG, IgA, or IgE. CD19+CD27+IgD− cells are called “switched” memory B cells and are indicators of normal B-cell activation and development in germinal centers in lymph nodes or other secondary lymphoid tissues.) These laboratory findings were separately correlated with clinical characteristics.RESULTS. The only significant laboratory differences between the SAD and CVID groups were the serum concentrations of IgG and IgA, which was expected because of the laboratory definitions of these entities. There were no differences in memory B-cell populations nor the occurrence of splenomegaly, bronchiectasis, and autoimmune disease (enteropathy, cytopenias, arthritis, diabetes) between the groups with SAD and CVID. However, when patients with each of these complications (without regard to immunodeficiency diagnosis) were compared with those without, a significantly (P

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Bonilla, F. A. (2007). Memory Switched B Cell Percentage and Not Serum Immunoglobulin Concentration Is Associated With Clinical Complications in Children and Adults With Specific Antibody Deficiency and Common Variable Immunodeficiency. Pediatrics, 120(Supplement_3), S156–S156. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2007-0846llll

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