T Cell Assessment in Allergic Drug Reactions during the Acute Phase According to the Time of Occurrence

Author:

Torres M.J.1,Mayorga C.2,Fernández T.D.2,Cornejo-García J.A.2,Antúnez C.2,Valenzuela M.2,Prado M.F. Del3,Rodriguez-Pena R.2,Blanca M.1

Affiliation:

1. Allergy Service, Carlos Haya Hospital, Malaga, Spain

2. Research Laboratory for Allergic Diseases, Carlos Haya Hospital, Malaga, Spain

3. Emergency Unit, Carlos Haya Hospital, Malaga, Spain

Abstract

Allergic drug reactions can be classified as immediate, accelerated or delayed. This classification usually correlates with the mechanism involved: immediate reactions are IgE mediated and delayed reactions are T cell dependent. We analyzed lymphocyte involvement in patients with these reactions by determining cell subpopulations, activation state and skin homing receptor expression (CLA) in blood and skin. Patients with immediate, accelerated and delayed reactions were evaluated during the acute phase and after resolution. Controls taking drugs were included. Phenotypic immunofluorescence analysis was done by flow cytometry in peripheral blood, and by immunohistochemistry in skin for delayed reactions. Forty-six patients were included, 17 with immediate reactions, 10 accelerated and 19 delayed. At the acute phase CLA was significantly increased in delayed reactions and HLA-DR in all three types of reaction. In the severest delayed reactions, Steven-Johnson/Lyell syndromes, the CD4 subsets were increased in peripheral blood and skin compared to maculopapular exanthemas and urticaria and HLA-DR when compared with urticaria. In maculopapular exanthemas CLA was significantly increased in peripheral blood and skin compared to urticaria and the severe reactions. We found that T-cells are implicated, besides delayed reactions, in immediate and accelerated reactions. In delayed reactions there is a parallelism between results found in skin and peripheral blood with a higher participation of CD4+ cells the more severe the reaction.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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