Author:
Ruck Tobias,Pfeuffer Steffen,Schulte-Mecklenbeck Andreas,Gross Catharina C.,Lindner Maren,Metze Dieter,Ehrchen Jan,Sondermann Wiebke,Pul Refik,Kleinschnitz Christoph,Wiendl Heinz,Meuth Sven G.,Klotz Luisa
Abstract
ObjectiveTo report 3 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) showing vitiligo after treatment with alemtuzumab.MethodsRetrospective case series including flow cytometric analyses and T-cell receptor (TCR) sequencing of peripheral blood mononuclear cells.ResultsWe describe 3 cases of alemtuzumab-treated patients with RRMS developing vitiligo 52, 18, and 14 months after alemtuzumab initiation. Histopathology shows loss of epidermal pigmentation with absence of melanocytes and interface dermatitis with CD8+ T-cell infiltration. Also compatible with pathophysiologic concepts of vitiligo, peripheral blood mononuclear cells of one patient showed high proportions of CD8+ T cells with an activated (human leukocyte antigen–DR+), memory (CD45RO+), and type 1 cytokine (interferon-γ + tumor necrosis factor–α) phenotype at vitiligo onset compared to a control cohort of alemtuzumab-treated patients with RRMS (n = 30). Of note, analysis of CD8 TCR repertoire in this patient revealed a highly increased clonality and reduced repertoire diversity compared to healthy controls and treatment-naive patients with RRMS. We observed a predominance of single clones at baseline in this patient and alemtuzumab treatment did not substantially affect the proportions of most abundant clones over time.ConclusionThe 3 cases represent a detailed description of vitiligo as a T-cell-mediated secondary autoimmune disease following alemtuzumab treatment. The prevailing concept of unleashed B-cell responses might therefore not cover all facets of alemtuzumab-related secondary autoimmunity. Mechanistic studies, especially on TCR repertoire, might help clarify the underlying mechanisms.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
37 articles.
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