X-linked recessive progressive combined variable immunodeficiency (Duncan's disease)

DT Purtilo, JPS Yang, CK Cassel, R Harper… - The Lancet, 1975 - Elsevier
DT Purtilo, JPS Yang, CK Cassel, R Harper, SR Stephenson, BH Landing, GF Vawter
The Lancet, 1975Elsevier
Of 18 boys in the Duncan kindred, 6 died of a lymphoproliferative disease. They exhibited a
subtle, progressive combined variable immunodeficiency disease characterised by benign
or malignant proliferation of lymphocytes, histiocytosis, and alterations in concentrations of
serum-immunoglobulins. Infectious mononucleosis occurred during or preceding terminal
events in at least 3 of the cousins. Fever, pharyngitis, lymphadenomegaly,
hepatosplenomegaly, atypical lymphocytosis, and a spectrum ranging from …
Abstract
Of 18 boys in the Duncan kindred, 6 died of a lymphoproliferative disease. They exhibited a subtle, progressive combined variable immunodeficiency disease characterised by benign or malignant proliferation of lymphocytes, histiocytosis, and alterations in concentrations of serum-immunoglobulins. Infectious mononucleosis occurred during or preceding terminal events in at least 3 of the cousins. Fever, pharyngitis, lymphadenomegaly, hepatosplenomegaly, atypical lymphocytosis, and a spectrum ranging from agammaglobulinæmia to polyclonal hypergammaglobulinæmia occurred. At necropsy, the thymus glands and thymic-dependent areas in the lymph-nodes and spleen were depleted of lymphocytes. Diffuse infiltrates composed of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and histiocytes, some containing erythrocytes, invaded the hæmatopoietic organs, viscera, and central nervous system. In addition, 2 half-brothers had lymphomas of the ileum and central nervous system. Approximately half the boys, including the half-brothers, were affected, and girls were spared, implying sex-linked recessive inheritance. Various lymphohistiocytoses resemble Duncan's disease, but it is distinctive from them in the mode of inheritance or by histological characteristics. This study suggests that the Epstein-Barr virus or other viruses triggered the fatal proliferation of lymphocytes and that progressive attrition of T-cell function allowed uncontrolled lymphoproliferation.
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