DEVELOPMENT OF IMMUNE-RESPONSES TO ASPERGILLUS AT AN EARLY AGE IN CHILDREN WITH CYSTIC-FIBROSIS

Citation
Jm. Eldahr et al., DEVELOPMENT OF IMMUNE-RESPONSES TO ASPERGILLUS AT AN EARLY AGE IN CHILDREN WITH CYSTIC-FIBROSIS, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 150(6), 1994, pp. 1513-1518
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Emergency Medicine & Critical Care","Respiratory System
ISSN journal
1073449X
Volume
150
Issue
6
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1513 - 1518
Database
ISI
SICI code
1073-449X(1994)150:6<1513:DOITAA>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
Although the ability of Aspergillus organisms to colonize the respirat ory tract in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) is well recognized, th e contribution of Aspergillus to the disease process is poorly underst ood. Using sera from 147 CF patients (age 5 to 43 yr), we measured IgE antibody tab) to Aspergillus fumigatus and five common inhalant aller gens with a radioallergosorbent test (PAST). Total IgE levels and IgG ab to radio-labeled Asp fl, an allergen purified from A. fumigatus and a potent inhibitor of protein synthesis, were also measured. Thirty ( 20%) of the patients had IgE ab to A. fumigatus, and 22 (15%) of these patients had developed total IgE levels greater than or equal to 400 IU/ml, raising the consideration of a diagnosis of allergic bronchopul monary aspergillosis (ABPA). Five of the 22 patients developed these I gE responses by age 5 yr and 14 by age 10 yr. The proportion of patien ts with IgE ab to one or more of the other allergens tested was not si gnificantly different from that of control subjects without respirator y symptoms. A striking proportion (84%) of CF sera contained IgG ab to Asp fl, compared with 6% of sera from control patients and 20% of ser a from allergic children with asthma (n = 25):only one of whom had IgE ab to A. fumigatus. In an examination of additional sera from young C F patients, IgG anti-Asp fl ab was detected in 41% of these sera from patients 5 yr of age or older, increasing to 98% of 89 sera from patie nts older than age 10. The early development of immune responses to As pergillus antigens, including the cytotoxic allergen Asp fl, raises th e questions of whether Aspergillus, in addition to Staphylococcus aure us and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, contributes to progressive lung deterio ration in patients with CF.