TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinical, immunological, and molecular features of typical and atypical severe combined immunodeficiency: Report of the italian primary immunodeficiency network
AU - Cirillo, Emilia
AU - Cancrini, Caterina
AU - Azzari, Chiara
AU - Martino, Silvana
AU - Martire, Baldassarre
AU - Pession, Andrea
AU - Tommasini, Alberto
AU - Naviglio, Samuele
AU - Finocchi, Andrea
AU - Consolini, Rita
AU - Pierani, Paolo
AU - D’Alba, Irene
AU - Putti, Maria Caterina
AU - Marzollo, Antonio
AU - Giardino, Giuliana
AU - Prencipe, Rosaria
AU - Esposito, Federica
AU - Grasso, Fiorentino
AU - Scarselli, Alessia
AU - Di Matteo, Gigliola
AU - Attardi, Enrico
AU - Ricci, Silvia
AU - Montin, Davide
AU - Specchia, Fernando
AU - Barzaghi, Federica
AU - Cicalese, Maria Pia
AU - Quaremba, Giuseppe
AU - Lougaris, Vassilios
AU - Giliani, Silvia
AU - Locatelli, Franco
AU - Rossi, Paolo
AU - Aiuti, Alessandro
AU - Badolato, Raffaele
AU - Plebani, Alessandro
AU - Pignata, Claudio
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Severe combined immunodeficiencies (SCIDs) are a group of inborn errors of the immune system, usually associated with severe or life-threatening infections. Due to the variability of clinical phenotypes, the diagnostic complexity and the heterogeneity of the genetic basis, they are often difficult to recognize, leading to a significant diagnostic delay (DD). Aim of this study is to define presenting signs and natural history of SCID in a large cohort of patients, prior to hematopoietic stem cell or gene therapies. To this purpose, we conducted a 30-year retro-prospective multicenter study within the Italian Primary Immunodeficiency Network. One hundred eleven patients, diagnosed as typical or atypical SCID according to the European Society for Immune Deficiencies criteria, were included. Patients were subsequently classified based on the genetic alteration, pathogenic mechanism and immunological classification. A positive relationship between the age at onset and the DD was found. SCID patients with later onset were identified only in the last decade of observation. Syndromic SCIDs represented 28% of the cohort. Eight percent of the subjects were diagnosed in Intensive Care Units. Fifty-three percent had an atypical phenotype and most of them exhibited a discordant genotype-immunophenotype. Pre-treatment mortality was higher in atypical and syndromic patients. Our study broadens the knowledge of clinical and laboratory manifestations and genotype/phenotype correlation in patients with SCID and may facilitate the diagnosis of both typical and atypical forms of the disease in countries where newborn screening programs have not yet been implemented.
AB - Severe combined immunodeficiencies (SCIDs) are a group of inborn errors of the immune system, usually associated with severe or life-threatening infections. Due to the variability of clinical phenotypes, the diagnostic complexity and the heterogeneity of the genetic basis, they are often difficult to recognize, leading to a significant diagnostic delay (DD). Aim of this study is to define presenting signs and natural history of SCID in a large cohort of patients, prior to hematopoietic stem cell or gene therapies. To this purpose, we conducted a 30-year retro-prospective multicenter study within the Italian Primary Immunodeficiency Network. One hundred eleven patients, diagnosed as typical or atypical SCID according to the European Society for Immune Deficiencies criteria, were included. Patients were subsequently classified based on the genetic alteration, pathogenic mechanism and immunological classification. A positive relationship between the age at onset and the DD was found. SCID patients with later onset were identified only in the last decade of observation. Syndromic SCIDs represented 28% of the cohort. Eight percent of the subjects were diagnosed in Intensive Care Units. Fifty-three percent had an atypical phenotype and most of them exhibited a discordant genotype-immunophenotype. Pre-treatment mortality was higher in atypical and syndromic patients. Our study broadens the knowledge of clinical and laboratory manifestations and genotype/phenotype correlation in patients with SCID and may facilitate the diagnosis of both typical and atypical forms of the disease in countries where newborn screening programs have not yet been implemented.
KW - Atypical SCID
KW - Lymphopenia
KW - Maternal engraftment
KW - T-cell defects
KW - Omenn syndrome
KW - Primary immunodeficiencies
KW - Severe combined immunodeficiencies
KW - Next generation sequencing
KW - Atypical SCID
KW - Lymphopenia
KW - Maternal engraftment
KW - T-cell defects
KW - Omenn syndrome
KW - Primary immunodeficiencies
KW - Severe combined immunodeficiencies
KW - Next generation sequencing
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/230068
U2 - 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01908
DO - 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01908
M3 - Article
SN - 1664-3224
VL - 10
SP - 1
EP - 14
JO - Frontiers in Immunology
JF - Frontiers in Immunology
ER -