Highlights1. What is already known about this topic? SARS-CoV-2 causes asymptomatic or mild infection in about 80% of humans, while an excessive immune response has killed millions. Differential susceptibility and risk factors became a concern early in the pandemic. Several monogenic defects that involve innate viral sensors or affect interferon response pathways, as well as autoantibodies against type 1 interferons, have been identified in 14% of patients with life-threatening COVID-19. The impact of the novel betacoronavirus infection in patients with known inborn errors of immunity is less clear. Case series and reports from different countries have suggested a minor impact or even a potential protective effect of the IEI for some patients.2. What does this article add to our knowledge? We describe findings and outcomes of COVID-19 in 31 pediatric and adult patients with known IEI from Mexico, 84% of whom survived. Pediatric patients had a higher hospitalization rate. Inpatient mortality was 40%, and ICU mortality was 63%. Six patients died of secondary bacterial infection or uncontrolled systemic inflammation, but not from overwhelming viral infection. One patient with an autoinflammatory disorder under treatment with anakinra had a catastrophic clinical course. Eighty percent of patients received IVIG as part of their treatment for acute SARS-CoV-2 infection.3. How does this study impact current management guidelines? We recommend continued and/or high-dose IVIG in patients with known IEI seeking care for COVID-19. Patients with autoinflammatory disorders, especially those with inflammasome dysregulation, should probably take extreme measures to prevent exposure, while doctors taking care of SARS-CoV-2 infected patients with immune deficiencies must do everything they can to prevent secondary bacterial infections. The high survival of patients with COVID-19 in the context of inborn errors of immunity worldwide (over 80%) might be the result of patientphysician awareness and special care.
This study was undertaken to investigate human leucocyte antigen (HLA) associations with benign migratory glossitis and psoriasis in Brazilian patients and particularly to determine whether benign migratory glossitis is also associated with HLA-Cw6, the classical association observed in psoriasis. The results showed a highly significant association of Cw6 with both psoriasis and benign migratory glossitis, with this antigen being present in 59.1% of the patients with psoriasis, in 43.8% of the patients with benign migratory glossitis, and in only 12.6% of the controls. Other significant positive associations, although at a lower significance level, were with B13, both in psoriasis and in benign migratory glossitis, and with B17, only in psoriasis. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the association of Cw6 with benign migratory glossitis. We believe that this finding reinforces the concept of a pathogenetic relationship between benign migratory glossitis and psoriasis.
DNA repair defects are inborn errors of immunity that result in increased apoptosis and oncogenesis. DNA Ligase 4-deficient patients suffer from a wide range of clinical manifestations since early in life, including: microcephaly, dysmorphic facial features, growth failure, developmental delay, mental retardation; hip dysplasia, and other skeletal malformations; as well as a severe combined immunodeficiency, radiosensitivity, and progressive bone marrow failure; or, they may present later in life with hematological neoplasias that respond catastrophically to chemo- and radiotherapy; or, they could be asymptomatic. We describe the clinical, laboratory, and genetic features of five Mexican patients with LIG4 deficiency, together with a review of 36 other patients available in PubMed Medline. Four out of five of our patients are dead from lymphoma or bone marrow failure, with severe infection and massive bleeding; the fifth patient is asymptomatic despite a persistent CD4+ lymphopenia. Most patients reported in the literature are microcephalic females with growth failure, sinopulmonary infections, hypogammaglobulinemia, very low B-cells, and radiosensitivity; while bone marrow failure and malignancy may develop at a later age. Dysmorphic facial features, congenital hip dysplasia, chronic liver disease, gradual pancytopenia, lymphoma or leukemia, thrombocytopenia, and gastrointestinal bleeding have been reported as well. Most mutations are compound heterozygous, and all of them are hypomorphic, with two common truncating mutations accounting for the majority of patients. Stem-cell transplantation after reduced intensity conditioning regimes may be curative.
Glucose-6-phosphate catalytic subunit 3 (G6PC3) de ciency is characterized by severe congenital neutropenia with recurrent pyogenic infections, a prominent super cial venous pattern, and cardiovascular and urogenital malformations, caused by an alteration of glucose homeostasis, with increased endoplasmic reticulum stress and cell apoptosis. We describe ve new cases from Mexico, and review 89 more patients reported in the past decade, to delineate the most frequent laboratory and genetic features, their treatment, and outcomes, and to expand the knowledge of syndromic and non-syndromic phenotypes in these patients.
This study was undertaken to investigate human leucocyte antigen (HLA) associations with benign migratory glossitis and psoriasis in Brazilian patients and particularly to determine whether benign migratory glossitis is also associated with HLA-Cw6, the classical association observed in psoriasis. The results showed a highly significant association of Cw6 with both psoriasis and benign migratory glossitis, with this antigen being present in 59.1% of the patients with psoriasis, in 43.8% of the patients with benign migratory glossitis, and in only 12.6% of the controls. Other significant positive associations, although at a lower significance level, were with B13, both in psoriasis and in benign migratory glossitis, and with B17, only in psoriasis. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the association of Cw6 with benign migratory glossitis. We believe that this finding reinforces the concept of a pathogenetic relationship between benign migratory glossitis and psoriasis.
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