Immunology Diagnosis
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Immunology Diagnosis
Diagnostico en el Laboratorio de Inmunología
Curated by Alfredo Corell
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Study suggests early diagnosis of severe combined immunodeficiency leads to high survival rates

Newborn Screening for Severe Combined Immunodeficiency in 11 Screening Programs in the United States


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JAMA. 2014;312(7):729-738. doi:10.1001/jama.2014.9132.

link: http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1896983&resultClick=3 


Conclusions and Relevance  Newborn screening in 11 programs in the United States identified SCID in 1 in 58 000 infants, with high survival. The usefulness of detection of non-SCID T-cell lymphopenias by the same screening remains to be determined.

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Laboratory Diagnosis of Primary Immunodeficiencies - an updated review

Laboratory Diagnosis of Primary Immunodeficiencies - an updated review | Immunology Diagnosis | Scoop.it
PubMed comprises more than 23 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links to full-text content from PubMed Central and publisher web sites.
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Clin Rev Allergy Immunol. 2014 Feb 26. [Epub ahead of print]

Laboratory Diagnosis of Primary Immunodeficiencies.

Abstract

Primary immune deficiency disorders represent a highly heterogeneous group of disorders with an increased propensity to infections and other immune complications. A careful history to delineate the pattern of infectious organisms and other complications is important to guide the workup of these patients, but a focused laboratory evaluation is essential to the diagnosis of an underlying primary immunodeficiency. Initial workup of suspected immune deficiencies should include complete blood counts and serologic tests of immunoglobulin levels, vaccine titers, and complement levels, but these tests are often insufficient to make a diagnosis. Recent advancements in the understanding of the immune system have led to the development of novel immunologic assays to aid in the diagnosis of these disorders. Classically utilized to enumerate lymphocyte subsets, flow cytometric-based assays are increasingly utilized to test immune cell function (e.g., neutrophil oxidative burst, NK cytotoxicity), intracellular cytokine production (e.g., TH17 production), cellular signaling pathways (e.g., phosphor-STAT analysis), and protein expression (e.g., BTK, Foxp3). Genetic testing has similarly expanded greatly as more primary immune deficiencies are defined, and the use of mass sequencing technologies is leading to the identification of novel disorders. In order to utilize these complex assays in clinical care, one must have a firm understanding of the immunologic assay, how the results are interpreted, pitfalls in the assays, and how the test affects treatment decisions. This article will provide a systematic approach of the evaluation of a suspected primary immunodeficiency, as well as provide a comprehensive list of testing options and their results in the context of various disease processes.

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