Browsing by Author "Aytekin, Caner"
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Item The evaluation of malignancies in Turkish PID patients; A multicenter study(Springer, 2018) Çekiç, Şükrü; Aytekin, Caner; Metin, Ayşe; Karaca, Neslihan; Kütütkçüler, Necil; Demirkaya, Metin; Sevinir, Betül; Kılıç, Sara Şebnem; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/İmmünoloji Anabilim Dalı.; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Pediatri Onkoloji Anabilim Dalı.; 0000-0001-8571-2581; AAH-1570-2021; AAH-1658-2021Item The evaluation of malignancies in Turkish primary immunodeficiency patients; A multicenter study(Wiley, 2020-02-14) Metin, Ayşe; Aytekin, Caner; Karaca, Neslihan Edeer; Barış, Safa; Kıykım, Ayça; Aydıner, Elif Karakoç; Özen, Ahmet; Aksu, Güzide; Kütükçüler, Necil; Çekiç, Şükrü; Karalı, Yasin; Aslan, Törehan; Sevinir, Betül; Kılıç, Sara Şebnem; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Çocuk Sağlığı ve Hastalıkları.; 0000-0002-9574-1842; 0000-0002-3966-4635; 0000-0003-4150-5200; FFS-1974-2022; AAH-1570-2021; 56117061000; 57188056500; 49863694000; 6603199915; 34975059200Background There are no data regarding the prevalence of malignancies in patients with primary immunodeficiency (PID) in Turkey. Along with the prevalence of malignancy, we aimed to present the types of malignancy and define the underlying immune deficiency of the patients. Method Between the years 1992 and 2018, from five tertiary immunology clinics, fifty-nine patients with PID who developed malignancy were included. All patients were evaluated for demographics, clinical features, and prognosis. Results The prevalence of malignancy in our cohort was detected as 0.9% (59/6392). The male-to-female ratio was 1.8 (38/21), and the median age of patients was 14 years (range: 1.5-51). The median age at diagnosis of malignancy was 10 years (range: 1.5-51). Ataxia-telangiectasia was the most frequent PID in patients with malignancy (n = 19, 32.2%), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma was the most common malignancy (n = 32, 51.6%). The rate of malignancy in DOCK8 deficiency (n = 7/43, 16.3%) was higher than AT (n = 19/193, 9.8%), Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (n = 2/22, 9.1%), and common variable immunodeficiency (n = 11/205, 5.4%). EBV quantitative PCR was positive in 16 out of 53 patients (30.2%). Three patients had secondary malignancies. Remission was achieved in 26 patients (44.1%). However, 31 patients (52.5%) died. Two patients (3.4%) are still on chemotherapy. Conclusion This study is the largest cohort investigating the association of malignancy in patients with PID in Turkey. While lymphoid malignancies were the most common malignancy and observed more frequently in AT patients, the risk for malignancy was higher in patients with DOCK8 deficiency compared to AT.Publication Inherited and acquired immunodeficiencies underlying tuberculosis in childhood(Wiley, 2015-03-01) Boisson-Dupuis, Stephanie; Bustamante, Jacinta; El-Baghdadi, Jamila; Camcioglu, Yildiz; Parvaneh, Nima; El Azbaoui, Safaa; Agader, Aomar; Hassani, Amal; El Hafidi, Naima; Mrani, Nidal Alaoui; Jouhadi, Zineb; Ailal, Fatima; Najib, Jilali; Reisli, İsmail; Zamani, Adil; Yosunkaya, Sebnem; Gülle-Girit, Saniye; Yıldıran, Alişan; Cipe, Funda Erol; Torun, Selda Hançerli; Metin, Ayşe; Atıkan, Başak Yıldız; Hatipoğlu, Nevin; Aydoğmuş, Çiğdem; Kılıç, Sara Şebnem; Doğu, Figen; Karaca, Neslihan; Aksu, Güzide; Kütükcüler, Necil; Keser-Emiroğlu, Melike; Somer, Ayper; Tanır, Gönül; Aytekin, Caner; Adimi, Parisa; Mahdaviani, Seyed Alireza; Mamishi, Setareh; Bousfiha, Aziz; Sanal, Ozden; Mansouri, Davood; Casanova, Jean-Laurent; Abel, Laurent; KILIÇ GÜLTEKİN, SARA ŞEBNEM; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Pediatrik İmmünoloji Anabilim Dalı.; 0000-0001-8571-2581; AAH-1658-2021Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) and a few related mycobacteria, is a devastating disease, killing more than a million individuals per year worldwide. However, its pathogenesis remains largely elusive, as only a small proportion of infected individuals develop clinical disease either during primary infection or during reactivation from latency or secondary infection. Subacute, hematogenous, and extrapulmonary disease tends to be more frequent in infants, children, and teenagers than in adults. Life-threatening primary TB of childhood can result from known acquired or inherited immunodeficiencies, although the vast majority of cases remain unexplained. We review here the conditions conferring a predisposition to childhood clinical diseases caused by mycobacteria, including not only M.tb but also weakly virulent mycobacteria, such as BCG vaccines and environmental mycobacteria. Infections with weakly virulent mycobacteria are much rarer than TB, but the inherited and acquired immunodeficiencies underlying these infections are much better known. Their study has also provided genetic and immunological insights into childhood TB, as illustrated by the discovery of single-gene inborn errors of IFN- immunity underlying severe cases of TB. Novel findings are expected from ongoing and future human genetic studies of childhood TB in countries that combine a high proportion of consanguineous marriages, a high incidence of TB, and an excellent clinical care, such as Iran, Morocco, and Turkey.Publication The extended clinical phenotype of 64 patients with dedicator of cytokinesis 8 deficiency(Mosby-Elsevier, 2015-08-01) Engelhardt, Karin R.; Gertz, Michael E.; Keleş, Sevgi; Schaeffer, Alejandro A.; Sigmund, Elena C.; Glocker, Cristina; Saghafi, Shiva; Pourpak, Zahra; Ceja, Ruben; Sassi, Atfa; Graham, Laura E.; Massaad, Michel J.; Mellouli, Fethi; Ben-Mustapha, Imen; Khemiri, Monia; Kılıç, Sara Şebnem; Etzioni, Amos; Freeman, Alexandra F.; Thiel, Jens; Schulze, Ilka; Al-Herz, Waleed; Metin, Ayse; Sanal, Oezden; Tezcan, Ilhan; Yeganeh, Mehdi; Niehues, Tim; Dueckers, Gregor; Weinspach, Sebastian; Patiroglu, Turkan; Ünal, Ekrem; Dasouki, Majed; Yılmaz, Mustafa; Genel, Ferah; Aytekin, Caner; Kütükçüler, Necil; Somer, Ayper; Kılıç, Mehmet; Reisli, Ismail; Camcioğlu, Yıldız; Gennery, Andrew R.; Cant, Andrew J.; Jones, Alison; Gaspar, Bobby H.; Arkwright, Peter D.; Pietrogrande, Maria C.; Baz, Zeina; Al-Tamemi, Salem; Lougaris, Vassilios; Lefranc, Gerard; Megarbane, Andre; Boutros, Jeannette; Galal, Nermeen; Bejaoui, Mohamed; Barbouche, Mohamed-Ridha; Geha, Raif S.; Chatila, Talal A.; Grimbacher, Bodo; KILIÇ GÜLTEKİN, SARA ŞEBNEM; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Pediatrik İmmünoloji Anabilim Dalı.; AAH-1658-2021Background: Mutations in dedicator of cytokinesis 8 (DOCK8) cause a combined immunodeficiency (CID) also classified as autosomal recessive (AR) hyper-IgE syndrome (HIES). Recognizing patients with CID/HIES is of clinical importance because of the difference in prognosis and management.Objectives: We sought to define the clinical features that distinguish DOCK8 deficiency from other forms of HIES and CIDs, study the mutational spectrum of DOCK8 deficiency, and report on the frequency of specific clinical findings.Methods: Eighty-two patients from 60 families with CID and the phenotype of AR-HIES with (64 patients) and without (18 patients) DOCK8 mutations were studied. Support vector machines were used to compare clinical data from 35 patients with DOCK8 deficiency with those from 10 patients with AR-HIES without a DOCK8 mutation and 64 patients with signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) mutations.Results: DOCK8-deficient patients had median IgE levels of 5201 IU, high eosinophil levels of usually at least 800/mu L (92% of patients), and low IgM levels (62%). About 20% of patients were lymphopenic, mainly because of low CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell counts. Fewer than half of the patients tested produced normal specific antibody responses to recall antigens. Bacterial (84%), viral (78%), and fungal (70%) infections were frequently observed. Skin abscesses (60%) and allergies (73%) were common clinical problems. In contrast to STAT3 deficiency, there were few pneumatoceles, bone fractures, and teething problems. Mortality was high (34%). A combination of 5 clinical features was helpful in distinguishing patients with DOCK8 mutations from those with STAT3 mutations.Conclusions: DOCK8 deficiency is likely in patients with severe viral infections, allergies, and/or low IgM levels who have a diagnosis of HIES plus hypereosinophilia and upper respiratory tract infections in the absence of parenchymal lung abnormalities, retained primary teeth, and minimal trauma fractures.