Abstract

Objectives: Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is a primary immunodeficiency disease characterized by the early onset of recurrent infections and persistent severe neutropenia, with or without genetic defect. We aimed to study the different clinical features and hematological and bone marrow characteristics of patients with SCN and the non-congenital form of severe neutropenia (SN) with unknown etiology.Methods: Thirty-nine Chinese children with severe neutropenia for longer than 6 months unrelated to virus infection or autoimmune diseases were enrolled in the study to analyse the clinical, laboratory, and molecular characteristics. They were followed clinically to observe their remission status.Results: Seven patients were found to have SCN mutations, including ELANE and G6PC3. Among 26 patients with close follow-up, one died for an unknown reason, and 10 resolved spontaneously with a median neutropenia duration of 14.5 months; these patients were designated as having recovered SN. The demographic characteristics of both groups were similar, with a median infection rate of 5 times/year. SCN patients had more frequent infection than recovered SN patients (4 times/year, P = 0.039). The median absolute neutrophil count (ANC) was 0.40 × 109/L in SCN patients, which was significantly higher than 0.2 × 109/L in SN with unknown etiology and 0.21 × 109/L in recovered SN patients (P = 0.021, P = 0.017). The median monocyte count was 1.60 × 109/L in SCN patients, which was also significantly higher than 0.57 × 109/L in SN of unknown etiology and 0.55 × 109/L in recovered SN patients (P = 0.018, P = 0.001). Bone marrow examinations demonstrated myeloid maturation arrest at the myelocyte-metamyelocyte stage in SCN patients and normal findings in SN with unknown etiology and recovered SN patients.Conclusions: Patients with severe neutropenia due to gene mutations demonstrate more serious symptoms than patients with unknown etiology. Patients with relatively higher ANC and monocyte counts are more likely to have known gene mutations. Future studies should focus on more detailed laboratory investigation, prolonged follow-up and advanced molecular biology tools to facilitate accurate diagnosis and effective treatment.

Highlights

  • We studied 39 cases of SN for which genetic analysis was conducted and analyzed clinical and laboratory findings in patients with or without a clear gene mutation

  • We identified unique differences between SCN and SN without etiology in severe

  • Due to the lack of accurate available tests for measuring antineutrophil antibodies, a diagnosis of autoimmune neutropenia could not be given in this study

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Summary

Objectives

Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is a primary immunodeficiency disease characterized by the early onset of recurrent infections and persistent severe neutropenia, with or without genetic defect. We aimed to study the different clinical features and hematological and bone marrow characteristics of patients with SCN and the non-congenital form of severe neutropenia (SN) with unknown etiology

Results
Discussion
Conclusion

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