Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 in Norway: phenotypic variation, autoantibodies, and novel mutations in the autoimmune regulator gene

ASB Wolff, MM Erichsen, A Meager… - The Journal of …, 2007 - academic.oup.com
ASB Wolff, MM Erichsen, A Meager, NF Magitta, AG Myhre, J Bollerslev, KJ Fougner, K Lima…
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2007academic.oup.com
Context: The autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type I (APS I) is a rare disease that
previously was difficult to diagnose. Autoantibody screening as well as mutational analysis
of the disease gene autoimmune regulator (AIRE) are important diagnostic tools for this life-
threatening syndrome. Objective: The objective of the study was to identify all patients with
APS I in Norway and correlate their clinical features with their autoantibody profiles and
mutations in the AIRE gene. Patients: We identified 36 Norwegian patients from 24 families …
Abstract
Context: The autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type I (APS I) is a rare disease that previously was difficult to diagnose. Autoantibody screening as well as mutational analysis of the disease gene autoimmune regulator (AIRE) are important diagnostic tools for this life-threatening syndrome.
Objective: The objective of the study was to identify all patients with APS I in Norway and correlate their clinical features with their autoantibody profiles and mutations in the AIRE gene.
Patients: We identified 36 Norwegian patients from 24 families with APS I (20 males, 16 females) during a nationwide survey for patients with Addison’s disease and polyendocrine syndromes, seven of them only after their death.
Research Design and Methods: Clinical data were collected from questionnaires and patient records. AIRE mutations were determined by DNA sequencing. Most autoantibodies were measured in RIAs against recombinant autoantigens, but anti-type I interferon (IFN) antibodies were titrated in ELISA or antiviral interferon neutralization assays.
Results: The prevalence of APS I in Norway was estimated to be about 1:90,000. Several patients exhibited a milder phenotype with few APS I disease components and onset only in late adolescent or adulthood. The others showed about the same distribution of disease components as reported in Finnish patients. Eleven different mutations were identified in the AIRE gene, six of these were novel, i.e. c.22C>T (p.Arg8Cys), c.290T>C (p.Leu97Pro), c.402delC (p.Ser135GlnfsX12), c.879 + 1G>A (p.IVS7 + 1G>A), c.1249dupC (p.Leu417ProfsX7), and c.1336T>G (p.Cys446Gly). The 13-bp deletion in exon 8 (c.967–979del13) was the most prevalent mutation, present in 23 of 48 (48%) of the alleles. The presence of neutralizing autoantibodies against IFN-ω was the most specific marker of APS I, being found in all but one Norwegian patient. Some other common APS I-associated autoantibodies appeared de novo during long-term follow-up of younger patients.
Conclusions: Norwegian patients with APS I clinically resemble those from Finland and other European countries, but some have milder phenotypes. In total, six new mutations were identified in the Norwegian APS I patients. Anti-type I IFN autoantibodies are easily detectable; their APS I specificity and persistently high titers render them reliable markers of APS I, even in prodromal or atypical cases. Both the clinical features and the AIRE mutations are more diverse in the Norwegian population than previously thought.
Oxford University Press