4.6 Article

Lineage-Specific Chimerism and Outcome After Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation for DOCK8 Deficiency

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 7, Pages 1536-1548

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10875-021-01069-5

Keywords

DOCK8 deficiency; HSCT; Mixed chimerism

Categories

Funding

  1. Care-for-Rare Foundation (C4R) [160073]
  2. Else Kroner-Fresenius Stiftung (EKFS) [2017_A110]
  3. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01GM1910C]
  4. Projekt DEAL

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Bi-allelic variants in the DOCK8 gene cause a combined immunodeficiency characterized by recurrent infections and allergies. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is the only curative option, with mixed chimerism showing potential benefits for patients. However, achieving complete donor chimerism is still recommended while reducing toxicity in conditioning regimens.
Bi-allelic variants in the dedicator of cytokinesis 8 (DOCK8) gene cause a combined immunodeficiency, characterized by recurrent sinopulmonary and skin infections, food allergies, eczema, eosinophilia, and elevated IgE. Long-term outcome is poor given susceptibility to infections, malignancy, and vascular complications. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is currently the only curative treatment option and has shown promising outcome. The impact of mixed chimerism on long-term outcome is unclear. We reasoned that reversal of disease phenotype would depend on cell lineage-specific chimerism. DOCK8 variants were confirmed by Sanger and/or exome sequencing and immunoblot and/or intracellular flow cytometry. Donor chimerism was analyzed by XY-fluorescence in situ hybridization or quantitative short tandem repeat PCR. Outcome was assessed by laboratory tests, lymphocyte subsets, intracellular DOCK8 protein flow cytometry, T-cell proliferation analysis, and multiparameter immunoblot allergy screening. We report on nine patients, four of whom with mixed chimerism, with a median follow-up of 78 months after transplantation. Overall, we report successful transplantation with improvement of susceptibility to infections and allergies, and resolution of eczema in all patients. Immunological outcome in patients with mixed chimerism suggests a selective advantage for wild-type donor T-cells but lower donor B-cell chimerism possibly results in a tendency to hypogammaglobulinemia. No increased infectious and allergic complications were associated with mixed chimerism. Aware of the relatively small cohort size, we could not demonstrate a consistent detrimental effect of mixed chimerism on clinical outcomes. We nevertheless advocate aiming for complete donor chimerism in treating DOCK8 deficiency, but recommend reduced toxicity conditioning.

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