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Autoimmune enteropathy and hepatitis in pediatric heart transplant recipient
Authors:Kimberly Lewis  Ryan Butts  J. Antonio Quiros  Michelle Hudspeth  Katherine Twombley  Andrew Savage  Sally Self  Ali Burnette  Shaoli Sun
Affiliation:1. Medical University of South Carolina – MUSC, Charleston, SC, USA;2. Department of Pediatrics Cardiology, MUSC, Charleston, SC, USA;3. Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology, MUSC, Charleston, SC, USA;4. Department of Hematology/Oncology, MUSC, Charleston, SC, USA;5. Department of Pediatric Nephrology, MUSC, Charleston, SC, USA;6. Department of Pathology, MUSC, Charleston, SC, USA
Abstract:AIE is a rare disorder in children that presents with severe diarrhea and malabsorption, caused by immune‐mediated damage to intestinal mucosa. AIE is often associated with various syndromes of immunodeficiency including IPEX syndrome (immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy and enteropathy, X‐linked). Dysfunctional T regulatory cells are the source of pathology in both IPEX syndrome and AIE as they are essential in maintaining tolerance to self‐antigens and eliminating autoreactive B cells. This case report describes a 10‐year‐old cardiac transplant and total thymectomy patient on chronic immunosuppression with tacrolimus that presented with AIE and extraintestinal manifestations of cyclical hepatitis. Transition from tacrolimus to sirolimus successfully increased T regulatory cells and resolved enteritis and hepatitis symptoms. Data support that thymectomy at <1 year of age increases risk of autoimmune disease due to abnormal immune maturation. Studies suggest that the sirolimus promotes the upregulation of the FoxP3 protein that is classically associated with Tregs. In turn, Tregs prevent the maturation of autoreactive B cells that lead to autoimmune reactions.
Keywords:autoimmune enteropathy  heart transplant  sirolimus  solid organ transplantation  T lymphocytes  thymectomy
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