Heterozygous STAT1 gain-of-function mutations underlie an unexpectedly broad clinical phenotype.
Julie ToubianaSatoshi OkadaJulia HillerMatias OleastroMacarena Lagos GomezJuan Carlos Aldave BecerraMarie Ouachée-ChardinFanny FouyssacKatta Mohan GirishaAmos EtzioniJoris Van MontfransYildiz CamciogluLeigh Ann KernsBernd BelohradskyStéphane BlancheAziz BousfihaCarlos Rodriguez-GallegoIsabelle MeytsKai KisandJanine ReichenbachEllen D RennerSergio RosenzweigBodo GrimbacherFrank L van de VeerdonkClaudia Traidl-HoffmannCapucine PicardLaszlo MarodiTomohiro MorioMasao KobayashiDesa LilicJoshua D MilnerSteven HollandJean-Laurent CasanovaAnne Puelnull nullPublished in: Blood (2016)
Since their discovery in patients with autosomal dominant (AD) chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) in 2011, heterozygous STAT1 gain-of-function (GOF) mutations have increasingly been identified worldwide. The clinical spectrum associated with them needed to be delineated. We enrolled 274 patients from 167 kindreds originating from 40 countries from 5 continents. Demographic data, clinical features, immunological parameters, treatment, and outcome were recorded. The median age of the 274 patients was 22 years (range, 1-71 years); 98% of them had CMC, with a median age at onset of 1 year (range, 0-24 years). Patients often displayed bacterial (74%) infections, mostly because of Staphylococcus aureus (36%), including the respiratory tract and the skin in 47% and 28% of patients, respectively, and viral (38%) infections, mostly because of Herpesviridae (83%) and affecting the skin in 32% of patients. Invasive fungal infections (10%), mostly caused by Candida spp. (29%), and mycobacterial disease (6%) caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, environmental mycobacteria, or Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccines were less common. Many patients had autoimmune manifestations (37%), including hypothyroidism (22%), type 1 diabetes (4%), blood cytopenia (4%), and systemic lupus erythematosus (2%). Invasive infections (25%), cerebral aneurysms (6%), and cancers (6%) were the strongest predictors of poor outcome. CMC persisted in 39% of the 202 patients receiving prolonged antifungal treatment. Circulating interleukin-17A-producing T-cell count was low for most (82%) but not all of the patients tested. STAT1 GOF mutations underlie AD CMC, as well as an unexpectedly wide range of other clinical features, including not only a variety of infectious and autoimmune diseases, but also cerebral aneurysms and carcinomas that confer a poor prognosis.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- type diabetes
- chronic kidney disease
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- poor prognosis
- staphylococcus aureus
- small molecule
- candida albicans
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- metabolic syndrome
- young adults
- long non coding rna
- blood brain barrier
- risk assessment
- deep learning
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- weight loss
- cerebral ischemia
- soft tissue