AI Article Synopsis

  • LRBA deficiency and CTLA-4 insufficiency are disorders linked to increased infection risk, autoimmune issues, and abnormal cell growth, but they have different clinical aspects and long-term outcomes.
  • A study evaluated 29 LRBA-deficient and 12 CTLA-4-insufficient patients, revealing that LRBA-deficient patients experience earlier symptoms, more pneumonia, and chronic diarrhea, whereas CTLA-4 patients had a better survival rate.
  • Flow cytometry was used to assess T-cell responses, showing unique patterns between the two conditions—LRBA deficiency had diminished CTLA-4 expression but showed improvement after T-cell stimulation, while CTLA-4 insufficiency had less response, indicating differences in immune dysfunction.

Article Abstract

Background: Lipopolysaccharide-responsive beige-like anchor protein (LRBA) deficiency and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte protein-4 (CTLA-4) insufficiency are recently described disorders that present with susceptibility to infections, autoimmunity, and lymphoproliferation. Clinical and immunological comparisons of the diseases with long-term follow-up have not been previously reported. We sought to compare the clinical and laboratory manifestations of both diseases and investigate the role of flow cytometry in predicting the genetic defect in patients with LRBA deficiency and CTLA-4 insufficiency.

Methods: Patients were evaluated clinically with laboratory assessments for lymphocyte subsets, T follicular helper cells (T ), LRBA expression, and expression of CD25, FOXP3, and CTLA4 in regulatory T cells (Tregs) at baseline and 16 h post-stimulation.

Results: LRBA-deficient patients (n = 29) showed significantly early age of symptom onset, higher rates of pneumonia, autoimmunity, chronic diarrhea, and failure to thrive compared to CTLA-4 insufficiency (n = 12). In total, 29 patients received abatacept with favorable responses and the overall survival probability was not different between transplanted versus non-transplanted patients in LRBA deficiency. Meanwhile, higher probability of survival was observed in CTLA-4-insufficient patients (p = 0.04). The T-cell subsets showed more deviation to memory cells in CTLA-4-insufficiency, accompanied by low percentages of Treg and dysregulated cT cells response in both diseases. Cumulative numbers of autoimmunities positively correlated with cT frequencies. Baseline CTLA-4 expression was significantly diminished in LRBA deficiency and CTLA-4 insufficiency, but significant induction in CTLA-4 was observed after short-term T-cell stimulation in LRBA deficiency and controls, while this elevation was less in CTLA-4 insufficiency, allowing to differentiate this disease from LRBA deficiency with high sensitivity (87.5%) and specificity (90%).

Conclusion: This cohort provided detailed clinical and laboratory comparisons for LRBA deficiency and CTLA-4 insufficiency. The flow cytometric approach is useful in predicting the defective gene; thus, targeted sequencing can be conducted to provide rapid diagnosis and treatment for these diseases impacting the CTLA-4 pathway.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/all.15331DOI Listing

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