Abstract

Chronic respiratory tract infections are a common problem in patients with severe humoral immunodeficiency despite intravenous immunoglobulin therapy (IVIG), often presenting as rhinosinusitis. Because it is unclear whether IVIG is a good substitute at the mucosal surface, we analyzed immunoglobulin levels and inflammatory cytokines (ECP, IL-8, and TNF-alpha) in nasal secretions of 13 patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) and in 10 patients with IgA deficiency. In patients with CVID, median IgG and IgM levels did not differ significantly from controls, whereas inflammatory cytokines were markedly elevated, reflecting persistent inflammation at the mucosal site. In contrast, patients with IgA deficiency showed significantly raised IgG and IgM levels, whereas ECP and TNF-alpha were only slightly increased. Low levels of SIgA might be compensated locally at the mucosal site by high levels of IgM and IgG. Our findings implicate that adequate IVIG is not sufficient to prevent chronic inflammation of the sinuses in patients with severe humoral immunodeficiency.

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