J 2015

Detection of impaired IgG antibody formation facilitates the decision on early immunoglobulin replacement in hypogammaglobulinemic patients

WOLF, Hermann M., Vojtěch THON, Jiří LITZMAN and Martha M. EIBL

Basic information

Original name

Detection of impaired IgG antibody formation facilitates the decision on early immunoglobulin replacement in hypogammaglobulinemic patients

Authors

WOLF, Hermann M. (40 Austria), Vojtěch THON (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Jiří LITZMAN (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution) and Martha M. EIBL (40 Austria)

Edition

Frontiers in Immunology, Lausanne, Frontiers Research Foundation, 2015, 1664-3224

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

30300 3.3 Health sciences

Country of publisher

Switzerland

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Impact factor

Impact factor: 5.695

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14110/15:00084744

Organization unit

Faculty of Medicine

UT WoS

000354759800002

Keywords in English

hypogammaglobulinemia; IgG antibody deficiency; CVID; immunoglobulin treatment; IVIG; primary vaccination

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 19/11/2015 10:49, Ing. Mgr. Věra Pospíšilíková

Abstract

V originále

Hypogammaglobulinemia (serum IgG lower than 2 SD below the age-matched mean) and clinical symptoms such as increased susceptibility to infection, autoimmune manifestations, granulomatous disease, and unexplained polyclonal lymphoproliferation are considered to be diagnostic hallmarks in patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID), the most frequent clinically severe primary immunodeficiency syndrome. In the present study, we investigated patients with hypogammaglobulinemia and no clinical or immunological signs of defective cell-mediated immunity and differentiated two groups on the basis of their IgG antibody formation capacity against a variety of different antigens (bacterial toxins, polysaccharide antigens, viral antigens). Patients with hypogammaglobulinemia and intact antibody production (HIAP) displayed no or only mild susceptibility to infections, while CVID patients showed marked susceptibility to bacterial infections that normalized following initiation of IVIG or subcutaneous immunoglobulin replacement therapy. There was a substantial overlap in IgG serum levels between the asymptomatic HIAP group and the CVID patients examined before immunoglobulin treatment. HIAP patients showed normal levels of switched B-memory cells (CD19(+)CD27(+)IgD(-)), while both decreased and normal levels of switched B-memory cells could be found in CVID patients. IgG antibody response to a primary antigen, tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV), was defective in CVID patients, thus confirming their substantial defect in IgG antibody production. Defective IgG antibody production against multiple antigens could also be demonstrated in an adult patient with recurrent infections but normal IgG levels. To facilitate early treatment before recurrent infections may lead to organ damage, the antibody formation capacity should be examined in hypogammaglobulinemic patients and the decision to treat should be based on the finding of impaired IgG antibody production.