Deficiencies of Innate Immunity Flashcards

1
Q

Causes of secondary immune deficiencies

A
  • Physiological (neonates, pregnancy, old age)
  • Infection
  • Drugs
  • Malnutrition
  • Malignancy
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2
Q

Diseases affecting mobilisation of phagocytes

A

Reticular dysgenesis - affects neutrophil production

Kostmann syndrome/Cyclic Neutropenia - affect neutrophil maturation

Leukocyte adhesion deficiencies - affect migration to infection site

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3
Q

Reticular Dysgenesis

A
  • Severe form of SCID
  • Stem cells cannot differentiate along myeloid or lymphoid lineages, so there are no neutrophils, monocytes/macrophages, lymphocytes or platelets
  • Fatal in early life unless corrected with BMT

In autosomal recessive severe SCID, there is mutation in mitochondrial energy metabolism enzyme AK2

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4
Q

Kostmann Syndrome

A
  • Autosomal Recessive
  • Mutation in HAX1 means neutrophils cannot mature
  • There is severe congenital neutropenia
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5
Q

Cyclic neutropenia

A
  • Autosomal dominant

- Mutation in neutrophil elastase (ELA-2) results in episodic neutropenia every 4-6 weeks

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6
Q

Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiencies

A
  • Deficiency of CD18, which forms part of the adhesion molecule LFA-1. (LFA-1 normally binds to ICAM on affected endothelial cells)
  • Neutrophils are mobilised to the bloodstream, but cannot express LFA-1 and therefore cannot exit the bloodstream
  • There are high neutrophil counts with absence of pus formation
  • DELAYED UMBILICAL CORD SEPARATION
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7
Q

Chronic Granulomatous Disease - pathophysiology

A
  • Deficiency in one component of NADPH complex means there is absent respiratory burst
  • Cannot generate oxygen free radicals
  • Impaired killing of intracellular pathogens
  • Excessive inflammation due to persistent activation of neutrophils and macrophages, these collect to form granulomas
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8
Q

Chronic Granulomatous Disease - Presentation

A
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Hepatosplenomegaly
  • Susceptibility to bacterial infections, especially catalase +ve (PLACESS)
Pseudomonas
Listeria
Aspergillosis 
Candida
E. coli
Staph aureus
Serratia
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9
Q

Testing for Chronic Granulomatous Disease

A

Testing for the presence of H2O2.
First activate neutrophils with a stimulus e.g. Salonella.

NBT (Nitroblue Tetrazolium test) becomes yellow to blue in the presence of H202.

Dihydroamine flow cytometry (DHR) used oxidised rhodamine which fluoresces in the presence of H2O2.

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10
Q

Cytokine deficiencies

A

Deficiencies in IL-12, IFN-y, IL-12R and IFN-yR
This disrupts the cytokine cycle between macrophages and T-cells.

  1. Infected macrophages released IL-12
  2. IL-12 acts on T-cells, and stimulated them to produce IFN-y
  3. IFN-y acts on macrophages and T-cells to stimulate production of free radicals and TNF
  4. This stimulates oxidative killing pathways

Deficiency results in:

  • Susceptibility to infection from mycobacterium and Salmonella
  • Inability to form granulomas

Management of cytokine deficiencies:

  • Aggressive management of infection
  • Prophylactic antibiotics e.g. Septrin
  • Prophylactic anti-fungals e.g. itraconazole
  • Definitive therapy - HSCT
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11
Q

Management of chronic granulomatous disease

A

Definitive management is IFN-y (boosts macrophage function)

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12
Q

NK cell deficiency

A
  • Can be classical (absence of NK cells in peripheral blood) or functional (poor NK cell function)
  • Patients are susceptible to viral infections, particularly Human Herpes virus infections and HPV

Management:

  • Prophylactic aciclovir
  • IFN-y to stimulate cytokines
  • Definitive treatment - HSCT
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13
Q

Complement deficiency - alternative pathway

A

Deficiency in Factor B/I/P leads to inability to mobilise complement rapidly in response to bacterial infections

Recurrent infections with encapsulated bacteria (NHS)

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14
Q

Complement deficiency - Classical pathway

A

DEFICIENCY IN C1/2/4

  • Classical pathway promoted phagocytosis-mediated clearance of dead cells
  • When immune complexes fail to activate the classical pathway, these cells are not cleared and the nuclear load is released
  • Therefore there is an increased load of self-antigens which can promote auto-immunity
  • The immune complexes deposit in skin, joints and kidneys causing local inflammation
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15
Q

Complement deficiency - MBL pathway

A

Does not lead to immunodeficiency!
Deficiency in MBL is present in 30% people
But where there is another cause of immune impairment, there can be increased risk of infection

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16
Q

Why does complement deficiency reduce immunity against encapsulated bacteria?

A

Defence against encapsulated bacteria involves antibody-mediated and complement-mediated processes

17
Q

Link between classical pathway deficiency and SLE

A

Almost all patients with C2 deficiency have SLE

C1q deficiency tends to present with SLE at a young age

18
Q

Secondary complement deficiency - causes

A

SLE patients:

  • Constant production of immune complexes in SLE patients means that complement factors become depleted
  • There is functional complement deficiency
  • C3 and C4 falls (C4 falls more)

Nephritic factors:

  • Nephritic factors are autoantibodies which stabilise C3 convertases, so C3 is activated and consumed
  • Can occur with glomerulonephritis or partial lipodystrophy
19
Q

Investigating complement deficiencies

A

CH50 - measures C1, C2, C4, C3, C5-9

AH50 - measures Factor D, Factor B, Properidin, C3, C5-9

20
Q

Management of complement deficiencies

A
  • Vaccination against encapsulated organisms (Pneumovax, Meningovax and Hib)
  • Prophylactic penicillin
  • Aggressive management of infections
  • If there is C7 or C9 infection, screen family members