Abstract
Extract: The present report describes an infant with severe combined immunodeficiency and cartilage-hair hypoplasia whose lymphocytes responded to thymosin in vitro. Immunologic evaluation was undertaken at 4 1/2 months of age following a history of recurrent severe infection. Family history included three cousins who died in early infancy, one from streptococcal meningitis and pneumonia, one from generalized varicella, and another from reticuloendotheliosis.
Quantitative immunoglobulins were markedly depressed: IgG 141, IgA 0, and IgM 24 mg/100 ml. There was an absolute lymphopenia, multiple skin tests were negative, and in vitro lymphocyte responses to mitogens and antigens were depressed. Spontaneous E rosette determinations were 21% compared with control values of 65.7%. Erythrocyte adenosine deaminase (ADA) activity was normal.
The patient's E rosette formation increased in the presence of thymosin, fraction 5, reaching a maximum of 56% with a concentration of 500 μg thymosin. Blastogenic responses to phytohemag-glutinin also increased in the presence of thymosin. Transplantation of 24-week fetal thymus in Millipore diffusion chambers and subsequently transplantation of 18-week fetal thymus by intra-peritoneal injection was accomplished. E rosettes increased to 35–40% and blastogenic responses to mitogens increased. Eight days after the second transplant the patient underwent a mild graft vs. host reaction which subsided after 1 week and mitogen blastogenic responses again increased to 5–8 times previous values, but still well below control ranges. Repeated episodes of pulmonary infection ensued, cor pulmonale resulted, and the clinical course was relentlessly downhill with the patient expiring from respiratory failure 5 months after transplantation.
Speculation: Reconstitution for primary cellular immune deficiency requires two steps: (1) provision of an adequate population of precursor lymphoid tissue which engrafts into the host and (2) maturation of available and/or transplanted cells. Some patients only require therapy directed toward the latter process and this can be accomplished with thymosin, transfer factor, fetal thymus in a diffusion chamber, or with fetal thymus by injection or transplant. Other patients, however, require transplantation of precursor lymphoid tissue, usually from bone marrow. Response to thymosin in vitro will not accurately separate these two groups of patients.
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Steele, R., Britton, H., Anderson, C. et al. Severe Combined Immunodeficiency with Cartilage-Hair Hypoplasia: In Vitro Response to Thymosin and Attempted Reconstitution. Pediatr Res 10, 1003–1005 (1976). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-197612000-00012
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-197612000-00012
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Severe combined immunodeficiency diseases
Springer Seminars in Immunopathology (1978)