4.7 Article

The Allergic Phenotype of Children and Adolescents with Selective IgA Deficiency: A Longitudinal Monocentric Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11195705

Keywords

SIgAD; inborn errors of immunity; primary immunodeficiency; allergy; asthma; infections; autoimmunity

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This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and characteristics of allergy in pediatric SIgAD patients, and the association between allergy and other comorbidities. The results showed that allergy was the second-most-common clinical manifestation in SIgAD patients, but allergic patients did not differ significantly from non-allergic patients in terms of immune phenotype, number and severity of infections, or increased autoimmunity.
Background: Selective IgA deficiency (SIgAD) is the most common inborn error of immunity. The exact prevalence and pathogenesis of allergy in SIgAD have not yet been defined. We aimed to describe the prevalence and the characteristics of allergy in pediatric SIgAD subjects, evaluate the association between allergy and other comorbidities, and define the immune phenotype of allergic and non-allergic patients. Methods: Clinical and immunological data from 67 SIgAD patients were collected over a 13-year period at a single center. Patients' characteristics were analyzed according to the presence of allergy. Results: Allergy was diagnosed in 34% of SIgAD patients, with a median age at allergy diagnosis of 8 years. Allergy was the second-most-common clinical manifestation, following recurrent respiratory infections. Among the allergic group, 74% had rhinitis, 30% asthma, 30% atopic dermatitis, and 22% food allergy; one out of three had more than one allergic manifestation. SIgAD patients showed more frequent transitory lymphopenia and a lower count of CD19+ at diagnosis than at last FU. However, compared to non-allergic subjects, allergic patients did not differ in their immune phenotype, number and severity of infections, or increased autoimmunity. Conclusions: In our longitudinal study, compared to non-allergic SIgAD patients, those with allergies did not present a more severe immune defect or complex clinical phenotype. However, evaluation and early identification of allergy in the context of SIgAD assessment, both at diagnosis and during FU, and definition of a proper management are important to prevent complications and improve the patient's quality of life.

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