Abstract

Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) belongs to the group of primary immunodeficiencies with a predominant deficiency in antibody synthesis and the most common diagnosis among clinically significant cases of primary immunodeficiency in adults. The main laboratory criterion for this disease is considered to be hypogammaglobulinemia (a decrease in the level of IgG less than 4.5 g/l with a decrease in the level of IgA, with/without a decrease in the level of IgM). Clinical manifestations of CVID are diverse: infectious syndrome (chronic infections of the lower respiratory tract, sinusitis, otitis, infectious diarrhea, septic arthritis), autoimmune syndrome (cytopenias, systemic rheumatic diseases), non-infectious pathology of the gastrointestinal tract (celiac-like or IBD-like syndromes , nodular hyperplasia of the mucosa), interstitial lung diseases, pathological non-malignant lymphoproliferation (lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly), oncological diseases, the formation of non-caseating granulomas in the internal organs). Due to the lack of a typical clinical picture, the diagnosis of CVID in adults is often made many years late, especially if the clinical picture is dominated by non-infectious manifestations. The article presents a clinical case when the patient had recurrent lymphadenopathy as the main symptom for several years. After examination by various specialists, she was referred to an immunologist because hypoproteinemia and a sharp decrease in the gamma fraction of globulins have been revealed. An immunological study revealed agammaglobulinemia and a pronounced imbalance of T-lymphocyte subpopulations (a significant decrease in the number of CD4+ cells and an increase in CD8+ cells). The clinical significance of T-lymphocyte disorders in CVID, the need for treatment with adequate doses of intravenous immunoglobulins are discussed.

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