6 research outputs found

    Circulating FVIII-specific IgG, IgA and IgM memory B cells from haemophilia A patients

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    International audienceINTRODUCTION:Approximately, 25% of haemophilia A (HA) patients treated by factor VIII (FVIII), develop antibodies, known as inhibitors, neutralizing the activity of infused FVIII. This immune response involves B cells (BC), including FVIII-specific memory B cells (MBC). Production of anti-FVIII antibodies after stimulation of FVIII-specific MBC suggests a role of these cells in the immune response to FVIII. Animal models allowed the study of circulating FVIII-specific cells, however few data are available on HA patients.AIM AND METHODS:In the present study, we simultaneously detected, via ELISpot assay, different isotypes of MBC in the blood of HA patients, after polyclonal activation. Patients included: three with active inhibitors; three with a history of inhibitors; six without any past or active inhibitor.RESULTS:FVIII-specific MBC were detected in peripheral blood of HA patients: (i) patients with active inhibitors (IgG: 4-5.2/10(6) BC; IgA: 2.9-4/10(6) BC) (ii) patients with a past of inhibitors (no IgG BC; IgA: 5-7.5/10(6) BC) (iii) patients without inhibitors (no IgG BC or IgA BC except one patient had two FVIII-specific IgA BC/10(6) BC).CONCLUSION:FVIII-specific IgA MBC were detected in HA patients with past and current immune responses against FVIII and FVIII-specific IgG MBC were found only in those with positive inhibitors. This study shows the possibility to detect and characterize easily and simultaneously the MBC from patient blood and that MBC seem different according to anti-FVIII immune history. It could be a useful tool to study anti-FVIII response and Immune Tolerance Induction cellular mechanisms

    Anti-A2 and anti-A1 domain antibodies are potential predictors of immune tolerance induction outcome in children with hemophilia A

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    International audienceBACKGROUND:Hemophilia A (HA) is a congenital bleeding disorder resulting from factor VIII deficiency. The most serious complication of HA management is the appearance of inhibitory antibodies (Abs) against injected FVIII concentrates. To eradicate inhibitors, immune tolerance induction (ITI) is usually attempted, but it fails in up to 30% of cases. Currently, no undisputed predictive marker of ITI outcome is available to facilitate the clinical decision.OBJECTIVES:To identify predictive markers of ITI efficacy.METHODS:The isotypic and epitopic repertoires of inhibitory Abs were analyzed in plasma samples collected before ITI initiation from 15 children with severe HA and high-titer inhibitors, and their levels were compared in the two outcome groups (ITI success [n = 7] and ITI failure [n = 8]). The predictive value of these candidate biomarkers and of the currently used indicators (inhibitor titer and age at ITI initiation, highest inhibitor titer before ITI, and interval between inhibitor diagnosis and ITI initiation) was then compared by statistical analysis (Wilcoxon test and receiver receiver operating characteristic [ROC] curve analysis).RESULTS:Whereas current indicators seemed to fail in discriminating patients in the two outcome groups (ITI success or failure), anti-A1 and anti-A2 Ab levels before ITI initiation appeared to be good potential predictive markers of ITI outcome (P 0.875).CONCLUSION:Anti-A1 and anti-A2 Abs could represent new promising tools for the development of ITI outcome prediction tests for children with severe HA

    Prevalence and epitope specificity of non-neutralising antibodies in a large cohort of haemophilia A patients without inhibitors

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    Antibodies (inhibitors and non-neutralising antibodies [NNA]) directed against factor VIII (FVIII) remain the main iatrogenic complication in haemophilia A (HA) patients. Inhibitors reduce FVIII pro-coagulant properties, whereas NNA are directed against non-functional epitopes. NNA are poorly studied and their prevalence, epitope specificity and physiopathology inadequately defined. The aim of this study was first to evaluate NNA prevalence in a French retrospective multicentric series of 210 patients without inhibitors, then to determine their epitope specificity (against the heavy chain [HC] or the light chain [LC] of FVIII) and particularly to assess the prevalence of anti-B domain NNA using specifically designed x-MAP assays. NNA occurred in 18.1% of patients (38/210) and their prevalence was not influenced by the severity of the disease. Among the 38 patients with NNA, 73.7% had anti-FVIII Abs against the HC, 13.2% against the LC and 13.2% had anti-FVIII Abs against both chains. There is thus a clear immuno-dominance of the HC of FVIII in the epitope profile of NNA, whatever the severity of HA. The proportion of NNA that recognised the B domain was 18.4% (n=7/38). A multivariate analysis did not highlight differences in NNA occurrence between patients treated with recombinant FVIII or with plasma- derived FVIII (19.6% vs. 14.9%, p=0.53)
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