IntroductionCommon variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is the most common primary immunodeficiency in adults. 1 Recurrent bacterial infections of the respiratory tract are the clinical hallmark present in nearly all patients. 2 In addition, up to 40% of the patients show gastrointestinal disease, concomitant lymphoproliferative disorders, autoimmune phenomena, or granulomatous inflammation. 2 The pathogenic understanding of antibody deficiency in humans has always been hampered by the great heterogeneity of the syndrome. 3 In 1966, Rosen and Janeway started to group antibody deficiencies by their mode of inheritance. 4 In 1973, Cooper included the clinical course and serum immunoglobulin levels, thereby separating hyper-IgM syndromes and selective IgA deficiency. 5 The remaining group of still very heterogeneous antibody deficiencies was termed CVID. Consecutive attempts to subclassify CVID by B-cell function in vitro 6,7 failed to reach diagnostic acceptance because of laborious and poorly standardized procedures and a lack of clinical relevance.In 2002, we and others suggested a flow cytometric classification of CVID according to the B-cell phenotype. 8,9 The abnormalities of circulating B cells in patients with CVID had already been recognized earlier, 10 but only with the ease and the broad availability of flow cytometry was a widespread and systematic analysis of these aberrations possible. The Freiburg classification divided patients into 3 groups by analyzing the expression of IgM, IgD, CD27 and CD21. 8 Group 1 was characterized by a severe reduction of switched memory B cells (IgD Ϫ IgM Ϫ CD27 ϩ less than 0.4% of lymphocytes), while group 2 representing 25% of the analyzed CVID patients exhibited nearly normal numbers of class-switched memory B cells, suggesting a post germinal center defect. The online version of this article contains a data supplement.The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked ''advertisement'' in accordance with 18 USC section 1734. Methods PatientsAll patients were diagnosed as having CVID based on the European Society for Immunodeficiencies/Pan-American Group for Immunodeficiency (ESID/PAGID) criteria, 11 including a marked decrease of IgG (at least 2 standard deviations [SDs] below the mean for age) and a marked decrease in at least one of the isotypes IgM or IgA, the onset of clinical significant immunodeficiency at greater than 2 years of age, and the exclusion of defined causes of hypogammaglobulinemia (see also www.esid.org). Not all patients have been evaluated for absent isohemagglutinins and/or poor response to vaccines. For the final evaluation of B-cell phenotyping, the following exclusion criteria were adopted: patients younger than 6 years of age at the time of flowcytometric evaluation, patients on immunosuppressive treatment, patients suffering currently from malignancies, and patients with less than 1% peripheral B cells. Altogether, 303 patients of origi...
Background & AimsIgG subclass 4–related disease (IgG4-RD) is characterized by increased serum levels of IgG4 and infiltration of biliary, pancreatic, and other tissues by IgG4-positive plasma cells. We assessed the prevalence of allergy and/or atopy, serum, and tissue IgE antibodies, and blood and tissue eosinophils in patients with IgG4-RD. We investigated the association between serum IgE and diagnosis and relapse of this disease.MethodsWe performed a prospective study of 48 patients with IgG4-RD, 42 patients with an increased serum level of IgG4 with other inflammatory and autoimmune conditions (disease control subjects), and 51 healthy individuals (healthy control subjects) recruited from Oxford, United Kingdom from March 2010 through March 2014, and followed for a median of 41 months (range, 3–73 months). Serum levels of immunoglobulin were measured at diagnosis, during steroid treatment, and at disease relapse for patients with IgG4-RD; levels at diagnosis were compared with baseline levels of control subjects. Allergen-specific IgEs were measured using the IgE ImmunoCAP. Levels and distribution of IgG4 and IgE antibodies in lymphoid, biliary, and pancreatic tissues from patients with IgG4-RD and disease control subjects were measured by immunohistochemistry. We analyzed data using the Spearman rank correlation and receiver operating characteristic curves.ResultsSerum levels of IgG4 increased to 1.4 g/L or more, and IgE increased to 125 kIU/L or more, in 81% and 54% of patients with IgG4-RD, respectively, compared with 6% and 16% of healthy control subjects (P < .0001). Peripheral blood eosinophilia was detected in 38% of patients with IgG4-RD versus 9% of healthy control subjects (P = .004). Of patients with IgG4-RD, 63% had a history of allergy and 40% had a history of atopy with an IgE-specific response; these values were 60% and 53% in patients with increased serum levels of IgE (P < .05). Level of IgE at diagnosis >480 kIU/L distinguished patients with IgG4-RD from disease control subjects with 86% specificity, 36% sensitivity, and a likelihood ratio of 3.2. Level of IgE at diagnosis >380 kIU/L identified patients with disease relapse with 88% specificity, 64% sensitivity, and a likelihood ratio of 5.4. IgE-positive mast cells and eosinophilia were observed in lymphoid, biliary, and pancreatic tissue samples from 50% and 86% of patients with IgG4-RD, respectively.ConclusionsIn a prospective study, we associated IgG4-RD with allergy, atopy, eosinophilia, increased serum levels of IgE, and IgE-positive mast cells in lymphoid, biliary, and pancreatic tissue. An IgE-mediated allergic response therefore seems to develop in most patients with IgG4-RD; levels of IgE might be used in diagnosis and predicting relapse.
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