Platelet and immune characteristics of immune thrombocytopaenia patients non-responsive to therapy reveal severe immune dysregulation.
María Elena Monzón-ManzanoMaría Teresa Álvarez RománRaúl Justo SanzIhosvany Fernández BelloDiana HernándezMónica Martín SalcesLarissa ValorIsabel Rivas PollmarNora Viviana ButtaVictor Jimenez YustePublished in: British journal of haematology (2020)
Multifactorial mechanisms leading to diminished platelet counts in immune thrombocytopaenia (ITP) might condition the ability of patients with ITP to respond to treatments. Examining their platelet and immune features, we aimed to detect singular characteristics of patients with ITP who do not respond to any treatment. We studied patients with chronic primary ITP who had been without treatment, or untreated (UT-ITP), for at least six months; included were responders to agonists of thrombopoietin receptors (TPO-RA), patients who showed no response to first- and second-line treatments (NR-ITP), and healthy controls. Platelets from NR-ITP patients exposed a reduced amount of sialic acid residues. Increased loss of platelet surface sialic acid residues was associated with increased platelet apoptosis. NR-ITP patients had an increased fraction of naive lymphocyte (L) B cells and a reduced LTreg (Lymphocyte T-regulator) subset. They also presented an anomalous monocyte and NK (Natural Killer) cells distribution. TPO-RA-treated patients seemed to recover an immune homeostasis similar to healthy controls. In conclusion, our results indicate a severe deregulation of the immune system of NR-ITP. The inverse correlation between loss of sialic acid and LTreg count suggests a potential relationship between glycan composition on the platelet surface and immune response, positing terminal sugar moieties of the glycan chains as aetiopathogenic agents in ITP.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- immune response
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- peripheral blood
- drug delivery
- transcription factor
- hiv infected
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- ankylosing spondylitis
- interstitial lung disease
- bone marrow
- disease activity
- natural killer cells