Common variable immunodeficiency: Difference between revisions

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*Diarrhea is common (21 to 57%)
*Diarrhea is common (21 to 57%)
**[[Giardia lamblia]] is the most common cause of chronic diarrhea
**[[Giardia lamblia]] is the most common cause of chronic diarrhea
**Others include [[Cryptosporidium parvum]], [[CMV]], [[Salmonella species]], [[Clostridium difficile]], and [[Campylobacter jejuni]]
**Others include [[Cryptosporidium parvum]], [[CMV]], [[Salmonella]], [[Clostridium difficile]], and [[Campylobacter jejuni]]
*Can also develop [[sarcoidosis]] (8 to 22%), with granulomatous changes occurring years before the hypogammaglobulinemia
*Can also develop [[sarcoidosis]] (8 to 22%), with granulomatous changes occurring years before the hypogammaglobulinemia
**Mainly in lung, lymph nodes, or liver
**Mainly in lung, lymph nodes, or liver

Latest revision as of 01:04, 27 January 2022

Background

  • Characterized by decreased IgG immunoglobulins, with or without decreases in IgA and IgM, and decreased response to vaccination
  • Must exclude other causes of hypogammaglobulinemia

Classification

Epidemiology

  • Affects up to 1 in 25,000 people

Clinical Manifestations

Prognosis

  • Decreased life expectancy
  • Median survival 13.7 years with granulomatous changes or 28.8 years without

Investigations

Serum IgG (mg/dL) Recommendation
<150 repeat immunoglobulins to confirm
150-250 repeat immunoglobulins to confirm

consider tetanus and diphtheria titres

consider pneumococcal vaccine titres pre- and post-vaccination

250-450 repeat immunoglobulins to confirm

check tetanus and diphtheria titres

check pneumococcal vaccine titres pre- and post-vaccination

450-600 repeat immunoglobulins to confirm

check tetanus, diphtheria, MMR, and VZV titres

check pneumococcal vaccine titres pre- and post-vaccination

Management

Immune Globulin Replacement

  • The mainstay of therapy if IVIg 400 to 600 mg/kg IV monthly, usually given every 3 to 4 weeks
    • Can be given subcutaneously, divided every 1 to 2 weeks, if IV access is difficult
  • Target trough depends on baseline IgG level
    • <100 mg/dL: target trough 600 mg/dL
    • 300 mg/dl: target trough 900 mg/dL
  • Although many are IgA deficient, there are low rates of anti-IgA antibodies in CVID, so IVIg is generally safe

Follow-Up

Patients Assessment Interval
all History and physical annually
CBC, liver and renal panel, albumin annually
spirometry annually
serum trough IgG ± IgA and IgM 6-12 months
chest x-ray on referral
lung disease high-resolution CT chest 3-4 years or after change of therapy
lung function with DLCO annually
GI complications upper and/or lower endoscopy as required
malabsorption or loss of height bone density and micronutrient assessment as required

Further Reading