Primary Immunodeficiency Disease Flashcards

1
Q

describe factors of immune deficiency

A

SPUR;
Serious infection - unresponsive to oral antibiotics
Persistent infections - early structural damage, chronic infection
Unusual infection - usual organism and site
Recurrent infection - 2 major or 1 major and recurrent minor infections in 1 year (major hallmark). Usually due to - common bacteria (Staph. aureus), myobacteria (TB), fungi

other features;
weight loss 
severe skin rash (eczema)
chronic diarrhoea
mouth ulceration 
unusual autoimmune disease
lymphoproliferative disorders
cancer
family history
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2
Q

describe the classification of immunodeficiency disorders

A

primary;
some children born with poor functioning immune system, some have flaws in B cell system and cannot produce antibodies
thymus is missing, small or abnormal means they may lack in T cells

secondary;
common
often subtle
often involves more than one component of immune system

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3
Q

describe conditions associated with secondary immune deficiency

A
physiological imunne deficiency 
infection 
treatment interventions 
malignancy 
biochemical and nutritional disorders
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4
Q

describe primary immunodeficiency disorders (PID)

A

respiratory disease - main and most common complication
recurrent respiratory infections are often first signs of warning and major cause of death
pulmonary complications (strep, pneumonia, haemophilis influenzae) cause significant morbidity and mortality in these patients
early diagnosis and appropriate treatment can prevent or at least slow the development of respiratory complications

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5
Q

describe respiratory system complications of PIDs

A

upper;
sinusitis - primary antibody deficiency
otitis media - primary antibody deficiency
laryngeal angioedema - complement system disorder

lower;
malignancies 
interstitial lung disease (scarring)
pneumonia 
bronchitis, bronchiectasis
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6
Q

describe primary antibody deficiency

A
PID
selective IgA deficiency 
common variable immunodeficiency (CVID)
specific antibody deficiency (SAD)
X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA)
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7
Q

describe complement system disorders

A

hereditary angioedema (HAE)

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8
Q

describe pneumonia as a PID

A
pneumonia is an inflammatory condition of the lung secondary to infection and one of the most frequent manifestations of PIDs;
primary antibody deficiency 
complement system disorder
congenital phagocytosis deficiency 
combined immunodeficiencies
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9
Q

describe important PIDs associated with respiratory complications in children

A

congenital neutropenia;
kostmann syndrome
rare genetic disorder
type 1 is most common and inherited in autosomal dominant manner
clinical manifestations - severe chronic neutropenia from birth, accumulation of precursor cells in bone marrow, treatment with recombinant G-CSF (reduces infections)

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10
Q

describe how to life cycle of a neutrophil can go wrong

A
  1. defects in neutrophil development - severe congenital neutropenia (nopus formation)
  2. defects in neutrophil trans-endothelial migration (rolling, adhesion, strengthening and spreading, intravascular crawling, docking structure formation, transmigration) - leukocyte adhesion deficiency
  3. defects in neutrophil killing - chronic granulomatous disease
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11
Q

describe the consequences if a patient’s phagocytes were unable to bind to endothelial adhesion molecules

A

failure to recognise activation markers expressed on endothelial cells
neutrophils are mobilised but cannot exit the bloodstream
clinical features - recurrent bacterial and fungal infections
blood count - very high neutrophil counts
site of infection - deep tissues (no pus formation)

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12
Q

describe leukocyte adhesion deficiency

A

very rare autosomal recessive primary immunodeficiency
caused by genetic defect in CD18 integrin gene on leukocytes
results in failure of neutrophil adhesion and migration and reduced uptake and degradation of opsonised bacteria

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13
Q

describe chronic granulomatous disease

A

deficiency of intracellular killing mechanism of phagocytes - absent respiratory burst
inability to generate oxygen/nitrogen free radicals (ROS/RNS)
impaired killing intracellular micro-organisms reuslting in excessive inflammation (failure to degrade chemoattractants and antigens, persistent accumulation of neutrophils, activated macrophages and lymphocytes leads to granuloma formation)

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14
Q

describe clinical features of chronic granulomatous disease

A
recurrent deep bacterial infections (staphylococcus, aspergillus, pseudomonas cepacia, mycobacteria (TB))
recurrent fungal infections 
failure to thrive
lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly 
granuloma formation
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15
Q

describe treatment of phagocyte deficiencies

A

immunoglobulin replacement therapy (IVIg)
aggressive management of infection - oral/IV antibiotics and anti-fungals, surgical draining of abscess
definitive therapy - haematopoietic stem cell transplantation, specific treatment (SCN - recombinant G-CSF), gene therapy

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16
Q

describe severe combined immunodeficiency

A

failure of production of lymphocytes in the thymus

clinical features;
unwell by 3 months of age
persistent diarrhoea
failure to thrive
infections of all types (common (more severe than normal), unusual and vaccine associated disease)
unusual skin disease 
family history of early infant death
17
Q

describe the causes of severe combined immunodeficiency

A
>20 possible pathways identified;
deficiency of cytokine receptors 
deficiency of signalling molecules 
metabolic defects 
defective receptor rearrangements
presence of different lymphocyte subsets (T, B, NK) depend on exact mutation 

X-linked;
most common
mutation of a component of the IL-2 receptor - shared by many other cytokine receptors, results in inability to repsond to cytokines (failure of T cell and NK cell development, production of immature B cells)
clinical features - low/absent T cells (IL-2 important for development), normal or increased B cells, poorly developed lymphoid tissue and thymus

18
Q

describe treatment of severe combined immunodeficiency

A

prophylactic;
avoid infections - prophylactic antibodies and anti-fungals, no live attenuated vaccines
aggressive treatment of existing infections
antibody replacement - IV immunoglobulin

definitive;
stem cell transplant from HLA identical sibling
stem cell transplant from other sibling or parent or from matched unrelated donor

gene therapy;

19
Q

describe Bruton’s x-linked hypogammaglobulinaemia

A

no circulating B cells
no plasma cells
no circulating antibody after first 6 months
as the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase gene is essential for B cell development

20
Q

describe disorders of T cell effector function

A

cytokine production
cytotoxicity
T-B cell communication