Title: Transient Hypogammaglobulinemia of Infancy
1Transient Hypogammaglobulinemia of Infancy
- Vivek U. Rao, M.D.
- Fellow, Allergy Immunology
- University of Pennsylvania
- Immunodeficiency Conference
- April 11, 2005
2Transient Hypogammaglobulinemia of Infancy (THI)
- Medline search
- Terms used
- Transient hypogammaglobulinemia
- Transient hypogammaglobulinaemia
- Pediatric and hypogammaglobulinemia
- Pediatric and hypogammaglobulinaemia
- 68 English articles found
- 50 were available at the University of
Pennsylvania Biomedical Library or via
E-journals the relevant articles will be
discussed during the remainder of todays
conference
3THI Historical Background
- Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy
- First described in 19561
- Characterized by abnormal delay in onset of
immunoglobulin synthesis1 - Physiologic hypogammaglobulinemia in infants is
prolonged - Usually occurs at 2-4 months, but lasts until
18-36 months in those with THI2
4THI Incidence
- True incidence unknown
- Articles over the years have argued about how
common THI is - Tiller and Buckley (Duke Univ.)3
- 1978 paper reported only 11 cases of THI out of
10,000 patients who underwent immunoglobulin
studies over 12-year period - Used strict criteria for THI
- At least one Ig class gt 2 SDs below normal for
age on ? 2 specimens obtained during infancy - Subsequent labs must show definite increase in
values - No features to suggest other types of primary
immunodeficiency
5THI Incidence
- Dressler et al.4
- Identified THI in only 5 patients after
evaluating 8,000 sera in 2 clinics in Germany
over 11 years
6THI Incidence
- Royal Childrens Hospital in Victoria, Australia1
- Only pediatric immunology center in the state of
Victoria (population 4 million) - Study reviewed data from immunology lab collected
between July 1979 and March 1990 - Patients lt 2 years of age with IgG levels lt 5th
percentile considered those with known
immunodeficiencies excluded - 11 boys and 7 girls had proved THI (initial IgG
low, subsequent level normal) - 28 children had probable THI (initial IgG low,
but no subsequent data available)
7THI Incidence
- Royal Childrens Hospital in Victoria, Australia1
- Study
- Estimated incidence
- Proved THI 23 per million births
- Probable THI 61 per million births
- Estimated incidence of other immunodeficiencies
(previously calculated from data from same lab) - XLA 7 per million births
- CVID 12 per million births
- Symptomatic absolute IgA deficiency 24 per
million births - SCID 14 per million births
8THI Incidence
- Childrens Hospital, Sao Paulo, Brazil (Grumach
et al.)5 - 166 cases of primary immunodeficiency over 15
years - Most common diagnoses
- IgA deficiency 60
- THI 14 (8 male, 6 female)
- Chronic granulomatous disease 10
- Complement 10
9THI Incidence
- Japan Nationwide survey6
- Survey 1
- 1700 hospitals and institutes in Japan sent
questionnaires asking if they had patients with
primary immunodeficiency syndrome 1966-1975 - 641 replied
- 628 cases reported
- THI 116 (18.5)
- IgA deficiency 93 (14.8)
- Selective immunodeficiency other than IgA 77
(12.3) - XLA 70 (11.1)
10THI Incidence
- Japan Nationwide survey6
- Survey 2
- Physicians who took care of patients reported in
first survey, as well as 100 physicians who
might be willing to register new cases - 497 patients registered
- CVID 79
- Selective IgA deficiency 74
- XLA 58
- CGD 54
- SCID 46
- Immunodeficiency with telangiectasia 35
- THI 33 (23 male, 10 female)
11THI Pathogenesis
- Normal values (n296) (Stiehm)7
Mean ? 1 SD.
12THI Pathogenesis
- One view heterogenous group of errors in immune
system8 - Alternative view normal variant of the immune
system in which some mature more slowly than
others, just like those with delayed growth
13THI Pathogenesis
- Genetic evidence
- Soothill et al.9
- 11 first-degree relatives of patients with
hypogammaglobulinemia were followed from birth - 4 developed sex-linked hypogammaglobulinemia
- 5 had probable THI
- Kilic et al.10
- Followed 40 Turkish children with THI
- None had first-degree relatives with known
immunologic defects - None had parents or siblings with abnormal IgG,
IgA, or IgM
14THI Pathogenesis
- Siegel et al. THI due to deficiency of helper T
cells11 - In vitro studies using lymphocytes from donors
- 17 with THI
- 6 who had recovered from THI
- 13 age-matched healthy children
- 11 parents of children with THI
15THI Pathogenesis
- Siegel et al.11
- Findings
- THI patients had same number of circulating B
lymphocytes as healthy controls - THI patients had decreased ability to synthesize
IgG (and to a lesser extent, IgM) in response to
pokeweed mitogen (T-cell-dependent B-cell
activator)
16THI Pathogenesis
- Siegel et al.11
- Findings
- THI patients do not have increased suppressor
activity - Based on creating co-cultures with 11 ratio of
THI patients lymphocytes to the parents, then
stimulating with pokeweed
17THI Pathogenesis
- Siegel et al.11
- Findings
- THI patients have deficient helper-T-cell
function - T and B cells were separated, recombined 11, and
cultured for 7 days with pokeweed mitogen - Parental T parental B ? high IgG
- THI T THI B ? low IgG
- Parental T THI B ? high IgG
- THI T parental B ? low IgG
18THI Pathogenesis
- Siegel et al.11
- Findings
- In THI, B cells are intrinsically intact
- In vitro infection with EBV (T-cell-independent
B-cell activator) ? IgG and IgM production
similar in THI patients and healthy controls - Absolute number of CD4 helper cells decreased in
THI patients compared to healthy controls and
parents - Number is normal in those who have recovered from
THI
19THI Pathogenesis
- Kilic et al.10
- Findings
- 26 patients with THI studied
- Normal CD4 numbers seen in all 26
20THI Pathogenesis
- Other possibilities12
- Defective production of cytokines
- Abnormal B-cell response to mediators
- Inhibition of B cells by cytokines
21THI Pathogenesis
- Kowalczyk et al. (1997)12
- 30 children with THI (IgG gt 2 SD below mean)
- 10 proved
- 20 probable
- 15 children with IgA deficiency
- 40 controls with recurrent infections but
negative immunodeficiency work-up - In vitro study took PBMCs, stimulated them with
phytohemagglutinin, and studied cytokines
22THI Pathogenesis
- Kowalczyk et al. (1997)12
- Results
- Normal numbers of CD3, CD4, CD8, CD19, and CD22
lymphocytes in THI patients - Increased TNF-alpha and TNF-beta in proved and
probable THI - Increased IL-10 in proved THI
- No change in IL-1, IL4, or IL-6
- When THI resolved, TNF-alpha and TNF-beta were
normal, but IL-10 remained elevated (at 6-12
month follow-up)
23THI Pathogenesis
- Kowalczyk et al. (1997)12
- Conclusions
- TNF may affect B cells by arresting IgG and IgA
production - Balance between TNF and IL-10 may affect
development of IgG-producing B cells
24THI Pathogenesis
- Kowalczyk et al. (2002)13
- 14 with THI (IgG gt 2 SD below mean with normal
IgM and IgA) - All eventually had normalization of IgG
- 20 with selective IgA deficiency
- 29 controls with recurrent infections but
negative work-up for immunodeficiency - Examined Th1 (TNF-alpha, TNF-beta, IFN-gamma) and
Th2 (IL-4, IL-10) cytokines
25THI Pathogenesis
- Kowalczyk et al. (2002)12
- Findings
- Increased frequency of TNF-alpha- and
TNF-beta-positive CD3/CD4 in THI - Slightly increased frequency of CD4/IL-10 (not
significant) in THI with no difference in
CD4/IL-4 - IL-12 but not IL-18 level (both needed for Th1
phenotype) significantly elevated in THI - IL-12 level decreased significantly when IgG
normalized
26THI Pathogenesis
- Kowalczyk et al. (2002)12
- Findings
- THI patients had an increased proportion of
IL-12/CD33 after stimulation with
IFN-gamma/LPS - Conclusion
- THI associated with an excessive Th1 response in
which IL-12 secretion is elevated
27THI Associated Infections
- Can be asymptomatic or have recurrent infections2
- URIs
- Otitis media
- Sinusitis
- Pneumonia (less common)
28THI Associated Infections
- Kilic et al.10
- Prospective evaluation of 40 patients in Turkey
with THI - Criteria for diagnosis
- At least 1 major Ig class ? 2 SD below mean for
age - Normal specific antibodies to polio antigen and
isohemagglutinins - Intact cellular immunity
- Absence of features of other immunodeficiency
syndromes
29THI Associated Infections
- Kilic et al.10
- Clinical features at presentation
- Upper respiratory tract infection 28 (70)
- Lower respiratory tract infection 11 (27)
- Otitis media 9 (22)
- Gastroenteritis 5 (12)
- Urinary tract infection 3 (7)
- Lymphadenitis 1 (2)
- GERD 1 (2)
- Asthma, allergic bronchitis 11 (27.5)
- Atopic dermatitis 2 (5)
30THI Associated Infections
- Respiratory infections
- Cano et al.14
- Followed 13 patients with THI did further
testing on 11 - Antibodies to respiratory viruses tested
- 9 of 11 THI patients tested prior to 17 months
lacked specific antibodies despite recurrent
respiratory tract infections - In contrast, 5 of 16 controls lacked specific
antibodies - 3 had no prior history of respiratory infections
- 1 had IgG checked and was found to have low level
31THI Associated Infections
- Respiratory infections
- Cano et al.14
- 13 patients with THI seen at follow-up between 20
and 44 months of age - 2 never demonstrated positive viral serologies
even though IgG normalized - 1 became serology positive at same time IgG
normalized - 2 had IgG return to normal before becoming
serology positive - 8 demonstrated positive viral serologies prior to
normalization of IgG
32THI Associated Infections
- Clostridium difficile infection
- Gryboski et al.15
- Retrospective review of records of infants and
children with diarrhea and C. difficile seen over
4-year period - 43 identified with diarrhea and C. difficile
- 2 sets of controls used
- 20 with abdominal pain and no diarrhea
- 40 with chronic diarrhea and no evidence of C.
difficile
33THI Associated Infections
- Clostridium difficile infection
- Gryboski et al.15
- Diarrhea C. difficile
- 15/43 with hypogammaglobulinemia
- 12 with low IgA and IgG
- 3 with low IgA and normal IgG
- All 15 had normal levels 6-12 months later
- Abdominal pain but no diarrhea
- 0/20 with hypogammaglobulinemia
- Diarrhea but no C. difficile
- 3/40 with low IgA (all 3 had milk-protein allergy)
34THI Associated Infections
- Clostridium difficile infection
- Gryboski et al.15
- Conclusion THI patients are at increased risk of
diarrhea from C. difficile, due to increased use
of antibiotics or inadequate local antibody
response to organism
35THI Associated Infections
- Bacterial gastroenteritis
- Melamed et al.16
- Retrospective review of data from a bacteriology
lab over 16-month period - Records of children with stool specimens positive
for Campylobacter jejuni analyzed - 51 cases found
- 5 were previously diagnosed with an
immunodeficiency - 1 combined immunodeficiency
- 2 XLA
- 1 agammaglobulinemia
- 1 THI
36THI Associated Infections
- Bacterial gastroenteritis
- Melamed et al.16
- 5 immunodeficiency patients
- More prolonged course of diarrhea (at least 1
week) - Multiple pathogens isolated from stools
- 46 normal patients
- Diarrhea lasted 2-7 days
- No other organisms isolated
- THI patient
- Stool also grew Shigella, Salmonella, and E. coli
37THI Associated Infections
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia17
- Case report of 3.5 month old boy with PCP
pneumonia (dxed by BAL) - Normal specific antibody production following
tetanus, diptheria, and Hib immunization - Normal T cell numbers
- Normal IgM but borderline low IgG and absent IgA
38THI Associated Infections
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia17
- Case report
39THI Associated Infections
- Poliomyelitis18
- Case report of 6-month old Japanese boy with THI
and neurovirulent variation of Sabin type 2 oral
poliovirus (based on PCR of CSF and stool) - Patient with febrile seizure at 4 months
abnormal eye movements (horizontal
nystagmus-like) and no visual recognition at 5
months - Child never received OPV, but developed
poliovirus meningoencephalitis (presumably from
contact with someone who was shedding) - IgG normalized by age 2, with no subsequent
episodes of unusual or severe infections
40THI Diagnosis
- No definite criteria for diagnosis19
- Occurs in infancy and generally resolves by 24-36
months - Usually characterized by serum IgG level ? 2 SDs
below normal - IgA (and IgM) may also be low
- Antibody responses to protein antigens
(diptheria, tetanus) are normal
41THI Diagnosis
- Diagnosis can truly be made only
retrospectively20 - Individuals may have normalization of IgG but
persistently low IgA levels, thus meeting
criteria for selective IgA deficiency
42THI and Risk for Other Diseases
- Atopy
- Not a prominent feature in most series1
- Exception Fineman et al.21
- Report of 4 infants seen within a 1-year period
- All 4 had THI, food allergies, and elevated IgE
43THI and Risk for Other Diseases
- Atopy
- Exception Walker et al.1
- Of 15 children with proved THI, 12 had either
atopic disease or food allergy/intolerance - 4 with cow milk protein intolerance
- 3 with asthma
- 2 with asthma and eczema
- 1 with asthma and immediate food hypersensitivity
reaction
44THI Treatment
- IVIG To give or not to give?
- Tiller and Buckley3
- Followed 11 children with THI
- None received IVIG, and none had serious
infections - Cano et al.14
- Followed 13 patients with THI
- 5 received IM IG therapy (usually for a short
period of time 9 months or so) - Therapy did not seem to delay onset of antibody
synthesis - Conclusion IM IG should be considered in THI
since there is minimal evidence of harm
45THI Long-term Outcome
- Little data available
- Long-term follow-up needed to exclude other
etiologies, such as CVID2
46THI
- References
- Walker AM, Kemp AS, Hill DJ, Shelton MJ. Features
of transient hypogammaglobulinaemia in infants
screened for immunological abnormalities.
Archives of Disease in Childhood. 70(3)183-6,
1994 Mar. - Ballow M. Primary immunodeficiency disorders
antibody deficiency. Journal of Allergy
Clinical Immunology. 109(4)581-91, 2002 Apr. - Tiller TL Jr, Buckley RH. Transient
hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy review of the
literature, clinical and immunologic features of
11 new cases, and long-term follow-up. Journal of
Pediatrics. 92(3)347-53, 1978 Mar. - Dressler F, Peter HH, Muller W, Rieger CH.
Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy Five
new cases, review of the literature and
redefinition. Acta Paediatrica Scandinavica.
78(5)767-74, 1989 Sep. - Grumach AS, Duarte AJ, Bellinati-Pires R,
Pastorino AC, Jacob CM, Diogo CL, Condino-Neto A,
Kirschfink M, Carneiro-Sampaio MM. Brazilian
report on primary immunodeficiencies in children
166 cases studied over a follow-up time of 15
years. Journal of Clinical Immunology.
17(4)340-5, 1997 Jul. - Hayakawa H, Iwata T, Yata J, Kobayashi N. Primary
immunodeficiency syndrome in Japan. I. Overview
of a nationwide survey on primary
immunodeficiency syndrome. Journal of Clinical
Immunology. 1(1)31-9, 1981 Jan. - Stiehm ER, Fudenberg HH. Serum levels of immune
globulins in health and disease a survey.
Pediatrics. 37(5)715-27, 1966 May. - Dalal I, Reid B, Nisbet-Brown E, Roifman CM. The
outcome of patients with hypogammaglobulinemia in
infancy and early childhood. Journal of
Pediatrics. 133(1)144-146.
47THI
- References
- Soothill JF. Immunoglobulins in first-degree
relatives of patients with hypogammaglobulinaemia.
Transient hypogammaglobulinaemia a possible
manifestation of heterozygocity. Lancet.
1(7550)1001-3, 1968 May 11. - Kilic SS, Tezcan I, Sanal O, Metin A, Ersoy F.
Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy
clinical and immunologic features of 40 new
cases. Pediatrics International. 42(6)647-50,
2000 Dec. - Siegel RL. Clinical disorders associated with T
cell subset abnormalities. Advances in
Pediatrics. 31447-80, 1984. - Kowalczyk D, Mytar B, Zembala M. Cytokine
production in transient hypogammaglobulinemia and
isolated IgA deficiency. Journal of Allergy
Clinical Immunology. 100(4)556-62, 1997 Oct. - Kowalczyk D, Baran J, Webster AD, Zembala M.
Intracellular cytokine production by Th1/Th2
lymphocytes and monocytes of children with
symptomatic transient hypogammaglobulinaemia of
infancy (THI) and selective IgA deficiency
(SIgAD). Clinical Experimental Immunology.
127(3)507-12, 2002 Mar. - Cano F, Mayo DR, Ballow M. Absent specific viral
antibodies in patients with transient
hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy. Journal of
Allergy Clinical Immunology. 85(2)510-3, 1990
Feb. - Gryboski JD, Pellerano R, Young N, Edberg S.
Positive role of Clostridium difficile infection
in diarrhea in infants and children. American
Journal of Gastroenterology. 86(6)685-9, 1991
Jun.
48THI
- References
- Melamed I, Bujanover Y, Igra YS, Schwartz D,
Zakuth V, Spirer Z. Campylobacter enteritis in
normal and immunodeficient children. American
Journal of Diseases of Children. 137(8)752-3,
1983 Aug. - Smart JM, Kemp AS, Armstrong DS. Pneumocystis
carinii pneumonia in an infant with transient
hypogammaglobulinaemia of infancy. Archives of
Disease in Childhood. 87(5)449-50, 2002 Nov. - Inaba H, Hori H, Ito M, Kuze M, Ishiko H, Asmar
BI, Komada Y. Polio vaccine virus-associated
meningoencephalitis in an infant with transient
hypogammaglobulinemia. Scandinavian Journal of
Infectious Diseases. 33(8)630-1, 2001. - Yates AB, Shaw SG, Moffitt JE. Spontaneous
resolution of profound hypogammaglobulinemia.
Southern Medical Journal. 94(12)1215-6, 2001
Dec. - McGeady SJ. Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of
infancy need to reconsider name and definition.
Journal of Pediatrics. 110(1)47-50, 1987 Jan. - Fineman SM, Rosen FS, Geha RS. Transient
hypogammaglobulinemia, elevated immunoglobulin E
levels, and food allergy. Journal of Allergy
Clinical Immunology. 64(3)216-22, 1979 Sep.