Combined Immune Defect in B-Cell Lymphoproliferative Disorders Is Associated with Severe Infection and Cancer Progression

Author:

Ochoa-Grullón JulianaORCID,Guevara-Hoyer KissyORCID,Pérez López Cristina,Pérez de Diego Rebeca,Peña Cortijo Ascensión,Polo Marta,Mateo Morales Marta,Anguita Mandley Eduardo,Jiménez García Carlos,Bolaños Estefanía,Íñigo Belén,Medina Fiorella,Rodríguez de la Peña Antonia,Izquierdo Delgado Carmen,de la Fuente Muñoz EduardoORCID,Mayol Elsa,Fernández-Arquero Miguel,González-Fernández Ataúlfo,Benavente Cuesta Celina,Sánchez-Ramón SilviaORCID

Abstract

B cell chronic lymphoproliferative diseases (B-CLPD) are associated with secondary antibody deficiency and other innate and adaptive immune defects, whose impact on infectious risk has not been systematically addressed. We performed an immunological analysis of a cohort of 83 B-CLPD patients with recurrent and/or severe infections to ascertain the clinical relevance of the immune deficiency expression. B-cell defects were present in all patients. Patients with combined immune defect had a 3.69-fold higher risk for severe infection (p = 0.001) than those with predominantly antibody defect. Interestingly, by Kaplan–Meier analysis, combined immune defect showed an earlier progression of cancer with a hazard ratio of 3.21, than predominantly antibody defect (p = 0.005). When B-CLPD were classified in low-degree, high-degree, and plasma cell dyscrasias, risk of severe disease and cancer progression significantly diverged in combined immune defect, compared with predominantly antibody defect (p = 0.001). Remarkably, an underlying primary immunodeficiency (PID) was suspected in 12 patients (14%), due to prior history of infections, autoimmune and granulomatous conditions, atypical or variegated course and compatible biological data. This first proposed SID classification might have relevant clinical implications, in terms of predicting severe infections and cancer progression, and might be applied to different B-CLPD entities.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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