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Published in: Journal of Clinical Immunology 3/2022

01-04-2022 | Septicemia | Original Article

Clinical Outcome and Underlying Genetic Cause of Functional Terminal Complement Pathway Deficiencies in a Multicenter UK Cohort

Authors: Annalie Shears, Cathal Steele, Jamie Craig, Stephen Jolles, Sinisa Savic, Rosie Hague, Tanya Coulter, Richard Herriot, Peter D. Arkwright

Published in: Journal of Clinical Immunology | Issue 3/2022

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Abstract

Background

Terminal complement pathway deficiencies often present with severe and recurrent infections. There is a lack of good-quality data on these rare conditions. This study investigated the clinical outcome and genetic variation in a large UK multi-center cohort with primary and secondary terminal complement deficiencies.

Methods

Clinicians from seven UK centers provided anonymised demographic, clinical, and laboratory data on patients with terminal complement deficiencies, which were collated and analysed.

Results

Forty patients, median age 19 (range 3–62) years, were identified with terminal complement deficiencies. Ten (62%) of 16 patients with low serum C5 concentrations had underlying pathogenic CFH or CFI gene variants. Two-thirds were from consanguineous Asian families, and 80% had an affected family member. The median age of the first infection was 9 years. Forty-three percent suffered meningococcal serotype B and 43% serotype Y infections. Nine (22%) were treated in intensive care for meningococcal septicaemia. Two patients had died, one from intercurrent COVID-19. Twenty-one (52%) were asymptomatic and diagnosed based on family history. All but one patient had received booster meningococcal vaccines and 70% were taking prophylactic antibiotics.

Discussion

The genetic etiology and clinical course of patients with primary and secondary terminal complement deficiency are variable. Patients with low antigenic C5 concentrations require genetic testing, as the low level may reflect consumption secondary to regulatory defects in the pathway. Screening of siblings is important. Only half of the patients develop septicaemia, but all should have a clear management plan.
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Metadata
Title
Clinical Outcome and Underlying Genetic Cause of Functional Terminal Complement Pathway Deficiencies in a Multicenter UK Cohort
Authors
Annalie Shears
Cathal Steele
Jamie Craig
Stephen Jolles
Sinisa Savic
Rosie Hague
Tanya Coulter
Richard Herriot
Peter D. Arkwright
Publication date
01-04-2022
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Clinical Immunology / Issue 3/2022
Print ISSN: 0271-9142
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2592
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10875-022-01213-9

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