Genomic Testing Identifies Monogenic Causes in Patients with Very Early-Onset Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Multi-center Survey in an Iranian Cohort.
Golnaz EslamianMahnaz JameeTooba MomenPejman RohaniSarehossadat EbrahimiMehrnaz MesdaghiSoodeh GhadimiMahboubeh MansouriSeyed Alireza MahdavianiMahnaz Sadeghi-ShabestariMorteza FallahpourBibi Shahin ShamsianNarges EslamiSamin SharafianNaghi DaraPeiman NasriNiloufar AminiJavad EnayatMazdak FallahiLeila Ghasemi HashtrodiMohammad ShojaeiMartha Guevara BecerraHolm H UhligZahra ChavoshzadehPublished in: Clinical and experimental immunology (2024)
Patients with very early-onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD) may present because of underlying monogenic inborn errors of immunity (IEI). Strong differences have been observed in the causes of monogenic IBD among ethnic populations. This multi-center study was carried out on 16 Iranian patients with VEO-IBD. We reviewed clinical and basic immunologic evaluation including flow cytometry and immunoglobulin levels. All patients underwent clinical whole exome sequencing (WES). Sixteen patients (8 females and 8 males) with a median age of 43.5 months were enrolled. The median age at the onset of symptoms was 4 months. Most patients (12, 75%) had consanguineous parents. Chronic non-bloody diarrhea (13, 81.3%) and perianal diseases including perianal abscess (6, 37.5%), anal fissure (6, 37.5%), or anal fistula (2, 12.5%) were the most common manifestations. WES identified a spectrum of genetic variants in 13 patients (81.3%): IL10RB (6, 37.5%), MVK (3, 18.8%), and CASP8, SLC35C1, G6PC3, and IKBKB in one patient, respectively. In 3 patients (18.7%) no variant was identified. Flow cytometry identified a spectrum of abnormalities that helped to assess the evidence of genetic diagnosis. At the end of the survey, 3 (18.8%) patients were deceased. This high rate of monogenic defects with a broad spectrum of genes reiterates the importance of investigating IEI in patients with infantile-onset IBD.