-
Cureus May 2024Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) is a rare central nervous system disease presenting as optic neuritis, myelitis, and brainstem syndromes. It may be...
Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) is a rare central nervous system disease presenting as optic neuritis, myelitis, and brainstem syndromes. It may be aquaporin-4 seropositive, anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody seropositive, or double seronegative. Double-seronegative NMOSD can pose a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. Treatment typically aims to decrease the incidence of relapse, for which high-dose intravenous methylprednisolone is the first-line agent. Non-steroid treatments include azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, and rituximab. This case describes a 45-year-old female presenting with left arm numbness and weakness for three months. She had been previously diagnosed with optic neuritis in 2013 but was lost to follow-up. Progression of weakness warranted admission to the neurology department. Diagnostic work and imaging were suggestive of neuromyelitis optica. Tests for aquaporin-4, anti-MOG, immunoglobulin G, and immunoglobulin M in the cerebrospinal fluid were all negative. Initial treatment comprised methylprednisolone; however, due to the progression of symptoms, she was given two cycles of rituximab. Rituximab targets the CD20 antigen in B cells and is thought to reduce the risk of relapse and the severity of NMOSD. The patient's Barthel index score, expanded disability status scale score, and motor examination improved after two cycles of rituximab.
PubMed: 38854188
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.60004 -
Transplantation Proceedings Jun 2024This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) associated with tacrolimus (TAC) in patients undergoing kidney-pancreas and kidney...
Safety and Efficacy of Mycophenolate Mofetil Associated With Tacrolimus for Kidney-pancreas and Kidney Transplantation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Studies.
INTRODUCTION
This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) associated with tacrolimus (TAC) in patients undergoing kidney-pancreas and kidney transplants, in comparison with cyclosporine (CyA), azathioprine (AZA), everolimus (EVL), sirolimus (SRL), manitimus (MAN), mizoribine (MZR), and enteric-coated mycophenolate sodium (ECMPS) in combination or monotherapy.
METHODS
A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials was performed. The outcomes comprised acute rejection, graft loss, and adverse events.
RESULTS
Thirty studies were included. The main adverse events related to the TAC+MMF scheme were infection (36%; 95%CI: 26%-46%), including cytomegalovirus (CMV) (14%; 95%CI: 8%-20%); anemia (20%; 95%CI: 2%-37%); leukopenia (18%; 95%CI: 3%-33%); nausea (20%; 95%CI: 1%-39%); and diarrhea (26%; 95%CI:13%-40%). TAC+MMF was compared to the schemes AZA+TAC, CyA+AZA, CyA+MMF, CyA+SRL, ECMPS, EVL, MAN+TAC, MMF+SRL, MZR, TAC+AZA, TAC+EVR, TAC+MZR, TAC +SRL and TAC. TAC+MMF was associated with a lower risk of rejection than MMF monotherapy (RD: -0.24; 95%CI -0.46; -0.02). Comparing TAC+MMF with the other regimens, no significant difference was found for graft loss. TAC+MMF was associated with a higher risk of infections than MZR (RD: 0.174; 95%CI: 0.25; 0.323) and TAC monotherapy (RD: 0.07; 95%CI 0.003; 0.138).
CONCLUSION
Gastrointestinal and hematological adverse events and infections are the most common with TAC+MMF for kidney-pancreas and kidney. TAC+MMF effectively prevents acute cellular rejection, and alternatives with AZA, CyA, SRL, ECMPS, EVL, MAN, and MSR have similar efficacy and safety profiles. TAC monotherapy and MZR may be associated with a lower risk of infections.
PubMed: 38853029
DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2024.05.014 -
Renal Failure Dec 2024To investigate the correlations between serum antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) and clinicopathological features, induction treatment response, and prognosis of...
OBJECTIVE
To investigate the correlations between serum antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) and clinicopathological features, induction treatment response, and prognosis of lupus nephritis (LN) patients.
METHODS
In this retrospective study, biopsy-proven LN patients from October 2010 to September 2020 were tested for serum ANCA by indirect immunofluorescence and ELISA and were divided into ANCA-positive group and ANCA-negative group. The clinicopathological data of the two groups were analyzed and compared.
RESULTS
Thirty-five of 115 patients (30.43%) were seropositive for ANCA. ANCA-positive patients had significantly higher systemic lupus erythematosus activity index and activity index scores, higher 24-h urinary protein, and lower complement three levels ( 0.001, 0.028, 0.023, 0.009, respectively). The incidences of oral ulcers, thrombocytopenia, and leukocyturia, and the positive rates of anti-dsDNA antibody and anti-histone antibody were significantly higher in ANCA-positive group ( 0.006, 0.019, 0.012, 0.001, 0.019, respectively). Class IV LN and fibrinoid necrosis/karyorrhexis were significantly more common in the ANCA-positive group ( 0.027, 0.002). There was no significant difference in the total remission rate of ANCA-positive patients receiving cyclophosphamide and mycophenolate mofetil as induction therapies (83.33% vs. 66.67%, > 0.05), while patients receiving cyclophosphamide as induction therapy had a higher total remission rate than those receiving other immunosuppressants (83.33% vs. 20%, 0.028).
CONCLUSIONS
LN patients with ANCA seropositivity at renal biopsy have a significantly higher disease activity, and their pathological manifestations are predominantly proliferative LN. These patients require a more active immunosuppressive therapy with cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate mofetil to improve their remission rate.
Topics: Humans; Lupus Nephritis; Antibodies, Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic; Female; Retrospective Studies; Male; Adult; Biopsy; Kidney; Middle Aged; Immunosuppressive Agents; Young Adult; Mycophenolic Acid; Prognosis; Antibodies, Antinuclear; Severity of Illness Index; Cyclophosphamide
PubMed: 38847502
DOI: 10.1080/0886022X.2024.2357743 -
Transplantation Jun 2024The TWO Study (Transplantation Without Overimmunosuppression) aimed to investigate a novel approach to regulatory T-cell (Treg) therapy in renal transplant patients,...
Late Treatment With Autologous Expanded Regulatory T-cell Therapy After Alemtuzumab Induction Is Safe and Facilitates Immunosuppression Minimization in Living Donor Renal Transplantation.
BACKGROUND
The TWO Study (Transplantation Without Overimmunosuppression) aimed to investigate a novel approach to regulatory T-cell (Treg) therapy in renal transplant patients, using a delayed infusion protocol at 6 mo posttransplant to promote a Treg-skewed lymphocyte repopulation after alemtuzumab induction. We hypothesized that this would allow safe weaning of immunosuppression to tacrolimus alone. The COVID-19 pandemic led to the suspension of alemtuzumab use, and therefore, we report the unique cohort of 7 patients who underwent the original randomized controlled trial protocol. This study presents a unique insight into Treg therapy combined with alemtuzumab and is therefore an important proof of concept for studies in other diseases that are considering lymphodepletion.
METHODS
Living donor kidney transplant recipients were randomized to receive autologous polyclonal Treg at week 26 posttransplantation, coupled with weaning doses of tacrolimus, (Treg therapy arm) or standard immunosuppression alone (tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil). Primary outcomes were patient survival and rejection-free survival.
RESULTS
Successful cell manufacturing and cryopreservation until the 6-mo infusion were achieved. Patient and transplant survival was 100%. Acute rejection-free survival was 100% in the Treg-treated group at 18 mo after transplantation. Although alemtuzumab caused a profound depletion of all lymphocytes, including Treg, after cell therapy infusion, there was a transient increase in peripheral Treg numbers.
CONCLUSIONS
The study establishes that delayed autologous Treg therapy is both feasible and safe, even 12 mo after cell production. The findings present a new treatment protocol for Treg therapy, potentially expanding its applications to other indications.
PubMed: 38845088
DOI: 10.1097/TP.0000000000005065 -
Nature Medicine Jun 2024Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) of the lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients receiving allogeneic...
Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) of the lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients receiving allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). Vedolizumab is a gut-selective anti-αβ integrin monoclonal antibody that reduces gut inflammation by inhibiting migration of GI-homing T lymphocytes. The efficacy and safety of vedolizumab added to standard GVHD prophylaxis (calcineurin inhibitor plus methotrexate/mycophenolate mofetil) was evaluated for prevention of lower-GI aGVHD after unrelated donor allo-HSCT in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial. Enrollment closed early during the COVID-19 pandemic with 343 patients randomized (n = 174 vedolizumab, n = 169 placebo), and 333 received ≥1 intravenous dose of 300 mg vedolizumab (n = 168) or placebo (n = 165) and underwent allo-HSCT. The primary end point was met; Kaplan-Meier (95% confidence interval) estimated rates of lower-GI aGVHD-free survival by day +180 after allo-HSCT were 85.5% (79.2-90.1) with vedolizumab versus 70.9% (63.2-77.2) with placebo (hazard ratio, 0.45; 95% confidence interval, 0.27-0.73; P < 0.001). For the 5 key secondary efficacy end points analyzed by day +180 after allo-HSCT, rates of lower-GI aGVHD-free and relapse-free survival and grade C-D aGVHD-free survival were significantly higher with vedolizumab versus placebo. No significant treatment differences were found for the other key secondary end points of non-relapse mortality, overall survival and grade B-D aGVHD-free survival, respectively. Incidence of treatment-related serious adverse events analyzed in patients receiving ≥1 dose of study treatment (n = 334) was 6.5% (n = 11 of 169) vedolizumab versus 8.5% (n = 14 of 165) placebo. When added to standard calcineurin inhibitor-based GVHD prevention, lower-GI aGVHD-free survival was significantly higher with vedolizumab versus placebo. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03657160 .
PubMed: 38844797
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-024-03016-4 -
Haematologica Jun 2024Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common malignancy that develops in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia, a cancer-predisposing inherited syndrome...
Genome-scale clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats screen identifies nucleotide metabolism as an actionable therapeutic vulnerability in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common malignancy that develops in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia, a cancer-predisposing inherited syndrome characterized by inactivating germline ATM mutations. ATM is also frequently mutated in sporadic DLBCL. To investigate lymphomagenic mechanisms and lymphoma-specific dependencies underlying defective ATM, we applied ribonucleic acid (RNA)-seq and genome-scale loss-offunction clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9 screens to systematically interrogate B-cell lymphomas arising in a novel murine model (Atm-/-nu-/-) with constitutional Atm loss, thymic aplasia but residual T-cell populations. Atm-/-nu-/-lymphomas, which phenotypically resemble either activated B-cell-like or germinal center Bcell-like DLBCL, harbor a complex karyotype, and are characterized by MYC pathway activation. In Atm-/-nu-/-lymphomas, we discovered nucleotide biosynthesis as a MYCdependent cellular vulnerability that can be targeted through the synergistic nucleotidedepleting actions of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and the WEE1 inhibitor, adavosertib (AZD1775). The latter is mediated through a synthetically lethal interaction between RRM2 suppression and MYC dysregulation that results in replication stress overload in Atm-/-nu-/-lymphoma cells. Validation in cell line models of human DLBCL confirmed the broad applicability of nucleotide depletion as a therapeutic strategy for MYC-driven DLBCL independent of ATM mutation status. Our findings extend current understanding of lymphomagenic mechanisms underpinning ATM loss and highlight nucleotide metabolism as a targetable therapeutic vulnerability in MYC-driven DLBCL.
PubMed: 38841800
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2023.284404 -
Cureus May 2024Overlapping autoimmune disorders are used to describe the coexistence of more than one autoimmune disease in the same patient. Mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) and...
Overlapping autoimmune disorders are used to describe the coexistence of more than one autoimmune disease in the same patient. Mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) and anti-synthetase syndrome (ASS) are autoimmune diseases that manifest with pulmonary involvement, presenting as persistent dyspnea. The coexistence of both conditions in the same patient is extremely rare. We herein report a case of a 44-year-old female who was diagnosed with MCTD with features of ASS (anti-Jo-1 antibody) in the setting of rheumatoid arthritis (anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibody), which shows temporary breathing improvement following treatment with corticosteroid and mycophenolate mofetil. However, after the completion of mycophenolate mofetil, she was found to be anti-Jo-1 antibody negative and anti-CCP antibody positive. Our case emphasizes the need to recognize overlapping autoimmune conditions in patients with complex clinical features and presentations with the immediate application of a comprehensive diagnostic approach and tailored treatment strategies. Early diagnosis and aggressive treatment are crucial for achieving remission and preventing organ damage.
PubMed: 38841030
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.59714 -
Food Microbiology Sep 2024Penicillium spp. produce a great variety of secondary metabolites, including several mycotoxins, on food substrates. Chestnuts represent a favorable substrate for...
Penicillium spp. produce a great variety of secondary metabolites, including several mycotoxins, on food substrates. Chestnuts represent a favorable substrate for Penicillium spp. development. In this study, the genomes of ten Penicillium species, virulent on chestnuts, were sequenced and annotated: P. bialowiezense. P. pancosmium, P. manginii, P. discolor, P. crustosum, P. palitans, P. viridicatum, P. glandicola, P. taurinense and P. terrarumae. Assembly size ranges from 27.5 to 36.8 Mb and the number of encoded genes ranges from 9,867 to 12,520. The total number of predicted biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) in the ten species is 551. The most represented families of BGCs are non ribosomal peptide synthase (191) and polyketide synthase (175), followed by terpene synthases (87). Genome-wide collections of gene phylogenies (phylomes) were reconstructed for each of the newly sequenced Penicillium species allowing for the prediction of orthologous relationships among our species, as well as other 20 annotated Penicillium species available in the public domain. We investigated in silico the presence of BGCs for 10 secondary metabolites, including 5 mycotoxins, whose production was validated in vivo through chemical analyses. Among the clusters present in this set of species we found andrastin A and its related cluster atlantinone A, mycophenolic acid, patulin, penitrem A and the cluster responsible for the synthesis of roquefortine C/glandicoline A/glandicoline B/meleagrin. We confirmed the presence of these clusters in several of the Penicillium species conforming our dataset and verified their capacity to synthesize them in a chestnut-based medium with chemical analysis. Interestingly, we identified mycotoxin clusters in some species for the first time, such as the andrastin A cluster in P. flavigenum and P. taurinense, and the roquefortine C cluster in P. nalgiovense and P. taurinense. Chestnuts proved to be an optimal substrate for species of Penicillium with different mycotoxigenic potential, opening the door to risks related to the occurrence of multiple mycotoxins in the same food matrix.
Topics: Penicillium; Mycotoxins; Multigene Family; Secondary Metabolism; Genome, Fungal; Phylogeny; Food Contamination; Patulin; Fungal Proteins; Nuts; Polyketide Synthases; Food Microbiology; Corylus; Heterocyclic Compounds, 4 or More Rings; Indoles; Piperazines
PubMed: 38839238
DOI: 10.1016/j.fm.2024.104532 -
Clinical Nephrology Jun 2024We report a 67-year-old man who presented with poor dietary intake and fatigue. Laboratory tests showed leukopenia, antinuclear antibody (ANA) positivity, anti-dsDNA...
We report a 67-year-old man who presented with poor dietary intake and fatigue. Laboratory tests showed leukopenia, antinuclear antibody (ANA) positivity, anti-dsDNA antibody (A-dsDNA) and anti-Smith antibody (anti-Sm) negativity, decreased C3 and C4, elevated serum immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgG4, and creatinine, and 1.25 g urinary protein at 24 hours. As his condition worsened, re-examination showed thrombocytopenia and A-dsDNA positivity, and renal biopsy pathology showed IgG4-related tubulointerstitial nephritis. The final diagnosis was IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). His condition improved with glucocorticoid (GC) combined with hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) treatment. This case highlights that IgG4-RD and SLE may occur successively or co-exist and may convert into each other.
PubMed: 38836366
DOI: 10.5414/CN111343 -
GE Portuguese Journal of... Jun 2024The association of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection with positive autoantibodies and autoimmune features has been known for decades. However, to date, very few...
INTRODUCTION
The association of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection with positive autoantibodies and autoimmune features has been known for decades. However, to date, very few cases of clinical autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) have been reported in association with HDV infection, most of them being in the context of treatment with peginterferon.
CASE REPORT
This case refers to a 46-year-old woman born in Guinea-Bissau who moved to Portugal in 2018 to investigate complaints of diffuse abdominal discomfort and nausea. Her initial work-up, including laboratory and liver histology, was consistent with type 1 AIH. She had HBe antigen-negative chronic hepatitis B virus infection with negative DNA and also a positive total anti-HDV antibody, with negative IgM and undetectable RNA. Therefore, after initiating prophylactic tenofovir difumarate, she was started on prednisolone followed by azathioprine, which was later stopped due to presumed hepatotoxicity. Repeated histology showed signs of viral superinfection, and she was treated with acyclovir due to a positive herpes simplex IgM, with HDV RNA remaining negative. A third flare in transaminases prompted the introduction of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) after a thorough exclusion of additional causes of liver disease. About 6 months later, during another bout of hepatitis, HDV RNA was finally positive and classified as genotype 5. MMF was stopped, and, considering a contraindication to interferon, the patient was offered therapy with bulevirtide, which she refused for personal reasons as she is currently living in her home country.
DISCUSSION
This is a challenging case of autoimmune or "autoimmune-like" hepatitis, probably induced by chronic HDV infection. High suspicion of HDV was essential because, had the case been interpreted as refractory AIH, with escalation of immunosuppression, a more severe course of the viral infection might have ensued. Recently, HDV suppression with bulevirtide was shown to reverse autoimmune liver disease. We hypothesize that the same could have happened to our patient, had she accepted this treatment.
PubMed: 38836124
DOI: 10.1159/000531773