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Natural history of type 1 diabetes on an immunodysregulatory background with genetic alteration in B-cell activating factor receptor: A case report

Authors :
Biagio Di Lorenzo
Lucia Pacillo
Giulia Milardi
Tatiana Jofra
Silvia Di Cesare
Jolanda Gerosa
Ilaria Marzinotto
Ettore Zapparoli
Beatrice Rivalta
Cristina Cifaldi
Federica Barzaghi
Carmela Giancotta
Paola Zangari
Novella Rapini
Annalisa Deodati
Giada Amodio
Laura Passerini
Paola Carrera
Silvia Gregori
Paolo Palma
Andrea Finocchi
Vito Lampasona
Maria Pia Cicalese
Riccardo Schiaffini
Gigliola Di Matteo
Ivan Merelli
Matteo Barcella
Alessandro Aiuti
Lorenzo Piemonti
Caterina Cancrini
Georgia Fousteri
Di Lorenzo, Biagio
Pacillo, Lucia
Milardi, Giulia
Jofra, Tatiana
Di Cesare, Silvia
Gerosa, Jolanda
Marzinotto, Ilaria
Zapparoli, Ettore
Rivalta, Beatrice
Cifaldi, Cristina
Barzaghi, Federica
Giancotta, Carmela
Zangari, Paola
Rapini, Novella
Deodati, Annalisa
Amodio, Giada
Passerini, Laura
Carrera, Paola
Gregori, Silvia
Palma, Paolo
Finocchi, Andrea
Lampasona, Vito
Cicalese, Maria Pia
Schiaffini, Riccardo
Di Matteo, Gigliola
Merelli, Ivan
Barcella, Matteo
Aiuti, Alessandro
Piemonti, Lorenzo
Cancrini, Caterina
Fousteri, Georgia
Source :
Frontiers in Immunology. 13
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2022.

Abstract

The immunological events leading to type 1 diabetes (T1D) are complex and heterogeneous, underscoring the necessity to study rare cases to improve our understanding. Here, we report the case of a 16-year-old patient who showed glycosuria during a regular checkup. Upon further evaluation, stage 2 T1D, autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura (AITP), and common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) were diagnosed. The patient underwent low carb diet, losing > 8 kg, and was placed on Ig replacement therapy. Anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (Rituximab, RTX) was administered 2 years after diagnosis to treat peripheral polyneuropathy, whereas an atypical mycobacteriosis manifested 4 years after diagnosis and was managed with prolonged antibiotic treatment. In the fifth year of monitoring, the patient progressed to insulin dependency despite ZnT8A autoantibody resolution and IA-2A and GADA autoantibody decline. The patient had low T1D genetic risk score (GRS = 0.22817) and absence of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DR3/DR4-DQ8. Genetic analysis identified the monoallelic mutation H159Y in TNFRSF13C, a gene encoding B-cell activating factor receptor (BAFFR). Significant reduced blood B-cell numbers and BAFFR levels were observed in line with a dysregulation in BAFF–BAFFR signaling. The elevated frequency of PD-1+ dysfunctional Tfh cells composed predominantly by Th1 phenotype was observed at disease onset and during follow-up. This case report describes a patient progressing to T1D on a BAFFR-mediated immunodysregulatory background, suggesting a role of BAFF–BAFFR signaling in islet-specific tolerance and T1D progression.

Details

ISSN :
16643224
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c0d83002ec99a6fdc8fb64c15e61788d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.952715