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Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency-I (LAD-I): A Comprehensive Review of Published Cases

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LAD-I is a rare disorder of leukocyte adhesion, resulting from ITGB2 gene mutations encoding for the Beta-2 Integrin component CD18. CD18 deficiencies prevent integrin dimerization and endothelial leukocyte adhesion, essential… Click to show full abstract

LAD-I is a rare disorder of leukocyte adhesion, resulting from ITGB2 gene mutations encoding for the Beta-2 Integrin component CD18. CD18 deficiencies prevent integrin dimerization and endothelial leukocyte adhesion, essential for extravasation and antimicrobial activity. LAD-I is characterized by delayed separation,of the umbilical cord, omphalitis, poor wound healing and leukocytosis. Severe LAD-I ( Reports regarding LAD-I have been published in recent decades but no recent comprehensive prognostic assessments are available. We sought an updated understanding of severe LAD-I with emphasis on prognosis in the absence of HSCT, HSCT outcomes and association of CD18 expression with clinical features. We created a database of all published LAD-I cases via Pubmed searches and review of available references. Three hundred thirty LAD-I cases were reported between 1975-2017 in 111 publications (89 case-reports; largest series n=36). The nations reporting the most cases were Iran (n=64), USA (n=52), and India (n=45); the highest number of publications were from US centers (26). 113 pts were considered to have severe LAD-I, 63 moderate and 154 were not classified. PMN CD18 expression levels was reported for 270 cases and was 2% were considered to have severe LAD-I (CD18% range 2.4 - 17.3). Gender was noted for 289 pts; 153 (53%) were male. Age at presentation was reported for 152 cases. For 65 pts with CD18 We sought to understand whether prognosis for severe LAD-I in the absence of HSCT is similar to the initially-reported 25% survival to age 2. There were 59 severe LAD-I cases (per investigator assessment or CD18 4% survived to adulthood. Outcomes for 119 pts who received HSCT were consistent with recent series; phenotypic correction was reported in 85% of pts with HLA-matched sibling donors. Mortality was 15% overall (8% for HLA-matched sibling recipients). The 27 pts receiving haploidentical HSCT had frequent graft failure (33%) with 16 (59%) receiving ≥1 subsequent HSCT. Infection details and CD18% were available for 159 (48%) cases. The most frequent infections in pts with CD18 10%. Umbilical complications were more frequent in severe LAD-I (94 of 112 pts with CD18 Severe LAD-I remains a life-threatening condition with limited 2-year survival in the absence of allogeneic HSCT. Umbilical complications and granulocytosis occur in nearly all pts. Respiratory tract, ear, sepsis, oral and skin infections are common. HSCT is potentially curative; transplant-mortality and other complications are frequent, especially in haploidentical transplants. Rapid identification of pts with potential LAD-I (unusual or severe infections in infancy, granulocytosis and umbilical complications) is essential to enable referral to centers with disease expertise. Disclosures Thrasher: 4bio Ventures Management Ltd: Other: Advisory Board; Orchard Therapeutics: Consultancy; Rocket Pharmaceuticals Ltd: Consultancy; Torus Therapeutics, Inc: Other: Advisory Board. Kohn: BioMarin Pharmaceutical: Research Funding; Orchard Therapeutics Ltd.: Consultancy, Membership on an entity9s Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Kite Pharma: Consultancy, Membership on an entity9s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Biogen IDEC: Research Funding.

Keywords: lad; cd18; hsct; leukocyte adhesion; severe lad

Journal Title: Blood
Year Published: 2017

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