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Original Article

Evidence of increased humoral endocrine organ-specific autoimmunity in severe and classic X-chromosome aneuploidies in comparison with 46,XY control subjects

ORCID Icon, , , , , & show all
Pages 175-182 | Received 20 Feb 2018, Accepted 13 May 2018, Published online: 28 Jun 2018
 

Abstract

Objective: In literature, the importance of X-linked gene dosage as a contributing factor for autoimmune diseases is generally assumed. However, little information is available on the frequency of humoral endocrine organ-specific autoimmunity in X-chromosome aneuploidies. In our preliminary study, we investigated the endocrine organ-specific humoral autoimmunity relative to four different organ-specific autoimmune diseases in a group of adult 47,XXY KS patients and in adults 46,XY control males (type 1 diabetes, T1DM; Addison’s disease, AD; Hashimoto thyroiditis, HT; autoimmune chronic atrophic gastritis, AG). The aim of the present study is to evaluate the frequency of autoantibodies (Abs) specific for T1DM, AD, HT, and AG in rarer higher grade X-chromosome aneuploidies (HGA) and in 47,XXY children.

Design and methods: Samples from 192 Caucasian patients with an X-chromosome aneuploidy (176 patients (55 children, 121 adults) with 47,XXY karyotype (KS patients) and 16 HGA patients (eight children, eight adults)) recruited from Sapienza, University of Rome (2007–2017) were tested for Abs specific for T1DM (insulin-Abs, GAD-Abs, IA-2-Abs, Znt8-Abs), HT (TPO-Abs), AD (21-OH-Abs), and AG (APC-Abs). The results were compared to those found in 213 46,XY control subjects (96 children, 117 adults).

Results: Altogether humoral organ-specific immunoreactivity was found in 13% of KS and HGA patients, with a significantly higher frequency than in the controls (p=.008). Almost 19% of HGA patients were positive for at least one of the organ-specific Abs investigated compared to 12.5% of KS patients. The frequency of the overall immunoreactivity was higher in KS children than in KS adults. The frequency of diabetes-specific Abs was significantly higher in the patient cohort than in controls (p=.005). Thyroid- and gastric-specific autoimmunity was also found in KS and HGA patients, while adrenal-specific immunoreactivity was rare.

Conclusions: These results suggest for the first time that the risk of endocrine organ-specific humoral autoimmunity progressively increases with the severity of X-chromosome polisomy. The screening for diabetes-, thyroid-, and gastric-specific autoimmunity should be considered in clinical practice for identifying rare and classic X-chromosome aneuploid patients at risk of developing organ-specific autoimmune diseases.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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