Genotype, phenotype, and outcomes of nine patients with T-B+NK+ SCID.

Article Details

Citation

Yu GP, Nadeau KC, Berk DR, de Saint Basile G, Lambert N, Knapnougel P, Roberts J, Kavanau K, Dunn E, Stiehm ER, Lewis DB, Umetsu DT, Puck JM, Cowan MJ

Genotype, phenotype, and outcomes of nine patients with T-B+NK+ SCID.

Pediatr Transplant. 2011 Nov;15(7):733-41. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3046.2011.01563.x. Epub 2011 Aug 23.

PubMed ID
21883749 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

There are few reports of clinical presentation, genotype, and HCT outcomes for patients with T-B+NK+ SCID. Between 1981 and 2007, eight of 84 patients with SCID who received and/or were followed after HCT at UCSF had the T-B+NK+ phenotype. One additional patient with T-B+NK+ SCID was identified as the sibling of a patient treated at UCSF. Chart reviews were performed. Molecular analyses of IL7R, IL2RG, JAK3, and the genes encoding the CD3 T-cell receptor components delta (CD3D), epsilon (CD3E), and zeta (CD3Z) were carried out. IL7R mutations were documented in four patients and CD3D mutations in two others. Three patients had no defects found. Only two of nine patients had an HLA-matched related HCT donor. Both survived, and neither developed GVHD. Five of seven recipients of haploidentical grafts survived. Although the majority of reported cases of T-B+NK+ SCID are caused by defects in IL7R, CD3 complex defects were also found in this series and should be considered when evaluating patients with T-B+NK+ SCID. Additional genes, mutations in which account for T-B+NK+ SCID, remain to be found. Better approaches to early diagnosis and HCT treatment are needed for patients lacking an HLA-matched related donor.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
T-cell surface glycoprotein CD3 delta chainP04234Details