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Dive into the research topics where Anete Sevciovic Grumach is active.

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Featured researches published by Anete Sevciovic Grumach.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

IRF8 Mutations and Human Dendritic-Cell Immunodeficiency

Sophie Hambleton; Sandra Salem; Jacinta Bustamante; Venetia Bigley; Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis; Joana Azevedo; Anny Fortin; Muzlifah Haniffa; Lourdes Ceron-Gutierrez; Chris M. Bacon; Geetha Menon; Céline Trouillet; David McDonald; Peter Carey; Florent Ginhoux; Laia Alsina; Timothy Zumwalt; Xiao-Fei Kong; Dinakantha Kumararatne; Karina Butler; Marjorie Hubeau; Jacqueline Feinberg; Saleh Al-Muhsen; Andrew J. Cant; Laurent Abel; Damien Chaussabel; Rainer Doffinger; Eduardo Talesnik; Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Alberto José da Silva Duarte

BACKGROUND The genetic analysis of human primary immunodeficiencies has defined the contribution of specific cell populations and molecular pathways in the host defense against infection. Disseminated infection caused by bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccines is an early manifestation of primary immunodeficiencies, such as severe combined immunodeficiency. In many affected persons, the cause of disseminated BCG disease is unexplained. METHODS We evaluated an infant presenting with features of severe immunodeficiency, including early-onset disseminated BCG disease, who required hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation. We also studied two otherwise healthy subjects with a history of disseminated but curable BCG disease in childhood. We characterized the monocyte and dendritic-cell compartments in these three subjects and sequenced candidate genes in which mutations could plausibly confer susceptibility to BCG disease. RESULTS We detected two distinct disease-causing mutations affecting interferon regulatory factor 8 (IRF8). Both K108E and T80A mutations impair IRF8 transcriptional activity by disrupting the interaction between IRF8 and DNA. The K108E variant was associated with an autosomal recessive severe immunodeficiency with a complete lack of circulating monocytes and dendritic cells. The T80A variant was associated with an autosomal dominant, milder immunodeficiency and a selective depletion of CD11c+CD1c+ circulating dendritic cells. CONCLUSIONS These findings define a class of human primary immunodeficiencies that affect the differentiation of mononuclear phagocytes. They also show that human IRF8 is critical for the development of monocytes and dendritic cells and for antimycobacterial immunity. (Funded by the Medical Research Council and others.).


Allergy | 2014

Classification, diagnosis, and approach to treatment for angioedema: consensus report from the Hereditary Angioedema International Working Group

Marco Cicardi; Werner Aberer; Aleena Banerji; M. Bas; Jonathan A. Bernstein; Konrad Bork; Teresa Caballero; Henriette Farkas; Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Allen P. Kaplan; Marc A. Riedl; Massimo Triggiani; Andrea Zanichelli; Bruce L. Zuraw

Angioedema is defined as localized and self‐limiting edema of the subcutaneous and submucosal tissue, due to a temporary increase in vascular permeability caused by the release of vasoactive mediator(s). When angioedema recurs without significant wheals, the patient should be diagnosed to have angioedema as a distinct disease. In the absence of accepted classification, different types of angioedema are not uniquely identified. For this reason, the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology gave its patronage to a consensus conference aimed at classifying angioedema. Four types of acquired and three types of hereditary angioedema were identified as separate forms from the analysis of the literature and were presented in detail at the meeting. Here, we summarize the analysis of the data and the resulting classification of angioedema.


World Allergy Organization Journal | 2012

WAO Guideline for the Management of Hereditary Angioedema

Timothy J. Craig; Emel Aygören Pürsün; Konrad Bork; Tom Bowen; Henrik Halle Boysen; Henriette Farkas; Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Constance H. Katelaris; Richard F. Lockey; Hilary J. Longhurst; William R. Lumry; Markus Magerl; Immaculada Martinez-Saguer; Bruce Ritchie; A Nast; Ruby Pawankar; Bruce L. Zuraw; Marcus Maurer

Hereditary Angioedema (HAE) is a rare disease and for this reason proper diagnosis and appropriate therapy are often unknown or not available for physicians and other health care providers. For this reason we convened a group of specialists that focus upon HAE from around the world to develop not only a consensus on diagnosis and management of HAE, but to also provide evidence based grades, strength of evidence and classification for the consensus. Since both consensus and evidence grading were adhered to the document meets criteria as a guideline. The outcome of the guideline is to improve diagnosis and management of patients with HAE throughout the world and to help initiate uniform care and availability of therapies to all with the diagnosis no matter where the residence of the individual with HAE exists.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2007

Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases in Latin America: The Second Report of the LAGID Registry

Lily Leiva; Marta Zelazco; Matías Oleastro; Magda Carneiro-Sampaio; Antonio Condino-Neto; Beatriz Tavares Costa-Carvalho; Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Arnoldo Quezada; Pablo Javier Patiño; José Luis Franco; Oscar Porras; Francisco Javier Rodríguez; Francisco Espinosa-Rosales; Sara Elva Espinosa-Padilla; Diva Almillategui; Celia Martínez; Juan Rodríguez Tafur; Marilyn Valentín; Lorena Benarroch; Rosy Barroso; Ricardo U. Sorensen

This is the second report on the continuing efforts of LAGID to increase the recognition and registration of patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases in 12 Latin American countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. This report reveals that from a total of 3321 patients registered, the most common form of primary immunodeficiency disease was predominantly antibody deficiency (53.2%) with IgA deficiency reported as the most frequent phenotype. This category was followed by 22.6% other well-defined ID syndromes, 9.5% combined T- and B-cell inmunodeficiency, 8.6% phagocytic disorders, 3.3% diseases of immune dysregulation, and 2.8% complement deficiencies. All countries that participated in the first publication in 1998 reported an increase in registered primary immunodeficiency cases, ranging between 10 and 80%. A comparison of the estimated minimal incidence of X-linked agammaglobulinemia, chronic granulomatous disease, and severe combined immunodeficiency between the first report and the present one shows an increase in the reporting of these diseases in all countries. In this report, the estimated minimal incidence of chronic granulomatous disease was between 0.72 and 1.26 cases per 100,000 births in Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, and Uruguay and the incidence of severe combined immunodeficiency was 1.28 and 3.79 per 100,000 births in Chile and Costa Rica, respectively. However, these diseases are underreported in other participating countries. In addition to a better diagnosis of primary immunodeficiency diseases, more work on improving the registration of patients by each participating country and by countries that have not yet joined LAGID is still needed.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2005

Paracoccidioides brasiliensis Disseminated Disease in a Patient with Inherited Deficiency in the β1 Subunit of the Interleukin (IL)–12/IL-23 Receptor

Dewton Moraes-Vasconcelos; Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Augusto Yamaguti; Maria Elisa Andrade; Claire Fieschi; Ludovic de Beaucoudrey; Jean-Laurent Casanova; Alberto José da Silva Duarte

BACKGROUND Paracoccidioides brasiliensis is a facultative intracellular dimorphic fungus that causes paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM), the most important deep mycosis in Latin America. Only a small percentage of individuals infected by P. brasiliensis develop clinical PCM, possibly in part because of genetically determined interindividual variability of host immunity. However, no primary immunodeficiency has ever been associated with PCM. METHODS We describe the first patient, to our knowledge, with PCM and a well-defined primary immunodeficiency in the beta 1 subunit of the interleukin (IL)-12/IL-23 receptor, a disorder previously shown to be specifically associated with impaired interferon (IFN)-gamma production, mycobacteriosis, and salmonellosis. RESULTS Our patient had a childhood history of bacille Calmette-Guérin disease and nontyphoid salmonellosis and, at the age of 20 years, presented to our clinic with a disseminated (acute) form of PCM. He responded well to antifungal treatment and is now doing well at 24 years of age. CONCLUSIONS This unique observation supports previous studies of PCM suggesting that IL-12, IL-23, and IFN-gamma play an important role in protective immunity to P. brasiliensis. Tuberculosis and PCM are thus not only related clinically and pathologically, but also by their immunological pathogenesis. Our study further expands the spectrum of clinical manifestations of inherited defects of the IL-12/IL-23-IFN-gamma axis. Patients with unexplained deep fungal infections, such as PCM, should be tested for defects in the IL-12/IL-23-IFN- gamma axis.


Annals of Allergy Asthma & Immunology | 2012

International consensus on hereditary and acquired angioedema

David M. Lang; Werner Aberer; Jonathan A. Bernstein; Hiok Hee Chng; Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Michihiro Hide; Marcus Maurer; Richard W. Weber; Bruce L. Zuraw

*Allergy/Immunology, Respiratory Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio yDepartment of Dermatology, Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria zDepartment of Internal Medicine, Division of Immunology/Allergy, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio xDepartment of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore jj Faculty of Medicine ABC, Sao Paulo, Brazil {Department of Dermatology, Institute of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Allergie-Centrum-Charite, Charite e Universitatsmedizin Berlin, Germany **Department of Medicine, Division of Allergy/Immunology, National Jewish Health, Denver, Colorado yyDepartment of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology, University of San Diego, San Diego, California


Molecular Immunology | 2014

Are complement deficiencies really rare? Overview on prevalence, clinical importance and modern diagnostic approach

Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Michael Kirschfink

Complement deficiencies comprise between 1 and 10% of all primary immunodeficiencies (PIDs) according to national and supranational registries. They are still considered rare and even of less clinical importance. This not only reflects (as in all PIDs) a great lack of awareness among clinicians and general practitioners but is also due to the fact that only few centers worldwide provide a comprehensive laboratory complement analysis. To enable early identification, our aim is to present warning signs for complement deficiencies and recommendations for diagnostic approach. The genetic deficiency of any early component of the classical pathway (C1q, C1r/s, C2, C4) is often associated with autoimmune diseases whereas individuals, deficient of properdin or of the terminal pathway components (C5 to C9), are highly susceptible to meningococcal disease. Deficiency of C1 Inhibitor (hereditary angioedema, HAE) results in episodic angioedema, which in a considerable number of patients with identical symptoms also occurs in factor XII mutations. New clinical entities are now reported indicating disease association with partial complement defects or even certain polymorphisms (factor H, MBL, MASPs). Mutations affecting the regulators factor H, factor I, or CD46 and of C3 and factor B leading to severe dysregulation of the alternative pathway have been associated with renal disorders, such as atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) and - less frequent - with membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN). We suggest a multi-stage diagnostic protocol starting based on the recognition of so called warning signs which should aid pediatricians and adult physicians in a timely identification followed by a step-wise complement analysis to characterize the defect at functional, protein and molecular level.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 1997

Brazilian report on primary immunodeficiencies in children : 166 cases studied over a follow-up time of 15 years

Anete Sevciovic Grumach; Alberto José da Silva Duarte; Raquel Bellinati-Pires; Antonio Carlos Pastorino; Cristina Miuki Abe Jacob; Constância Lima Diogo; Antonio Condino-Neto; Michael Kirschfink; Magda Carneiro-Sampaio

One hundred sixty-six cases of primary immunodeficiency diseases (PID) (95 males, 71 females), diagnosed according to WHO criteria, have been registered at the Childrens Hospital, University of São Paulo, Brazil. The following frequencies were found: predominantly humoral defects, 60.8% (n = 101); T cell defects, 4.9% (n = 8); combined ID, 9.6% (n = 16); phagocyte disorders, 18.7% (n = 31); and complement deficiencies, 6% (n = 10). IgA deficiency was the most frequent disorder (n = 60), followed by transient hypogammaglobulinemia (n = 14), chronic granulomatous disease (n = 14), and X-linked agammaglobulinemia (n = 9). In comparison to other (national) reports, we observed higher relative frequencies of phagocyte and complement deficiencies. Recurrent infections were the cause of death in 12.7%. Allergic symptoms were observed in 41%, mainly in IgA-deficient, hypogammaglobulinemic, or hyper-IgE patients, and autoimmune disorders in 5%, predominantly in IgA and complement deficiencies. Five patients suffered from BCG dissemination; two of them died. This is the first Brazilian report on PID over an observation time of 15 years.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2014

First Report of the Hyper-IgM Syndrome Registry of the Latin American Society for Immunodeficiencies: Novel Mutations, Unique Infections, and Outcomes

Otavio Cabral-Marques; Stefanie Klaver; Lena Friederike Schimke; Évelyn H Ascendino; Taj Ali Khan; Paulo Vitor Soeiro Pereira; Angela Falcai; Alexander Vargas-Hernández; Leopoldo Santos-Argumedo; Liliana Bezrodnik; Ileana Moreira; Gisela Seminario; Daniela Di Giovanni; Andrea Gómez Raccio; Oscar Porras; Cristina Worm Weber; Janaíra Fernandes Ferreira; Fabiola Scancetti Tavares; Elisa de Carvalho; Claudia Valente; Gisele Kuntze; Miguel Galicchio; Alejandra King; Nelson Augusto Rosario-Filho; Milena Baptistella Grota; Maria Marluce dos Santos Vilela; Regina Sumiko Watanabe Di Gesu; Simone Lima; Leiva de Souza Moura; Eduardo Talesnik

Hyper-IgM (HIGM) syndrome is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by normal or elevated serum IgM levels associated with absent or decreased IgG, IgA and IgE. Here we summarize data from the HIGM syndrome Registry of the Latin American Society for Immunodeficiencies (LASID). Of the 58 patients from 51 families reported to the registry with the clinical phenotype of HIGM syndrome, molecular defects were identified in 37 patients thus far. We retrospectively analyzed the clinical, immunological and molecular data from these 37 patients. CD40 ligand (CD40L) deficiency was found in 35 patients from 25 families and activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) deficiency in 2 unrelated patients. Five previously unreported mutations were identified in the CD40L gene (CD40LG). Respiratory tract infections, mainly pneumonia, were the most frequent clinical manifestation. Previously undescribed fungal and opportunistic infections were observed in CD40L-deficient patients but not in the two patients with AID deficiency. These include the first cases of pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Serratia marcescens or Aspergillus sp. and diarrhea caused by Microsporidium sp. or Isospora belli. Except for four CD40L-deficient patients who died from complications of presumptive central nervous system infections or sepsis, all patients reported in this study are alive. Four CD40L-deficient patients underwent successful bone marrow transplantation. This report characterizes the clinical and genetic spectrum of HIGM syndrome in Latin America and expands the understanding of the genotype and phenotype of this syndrome in tropical areas.


Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | 2002

Immunoglobulin G subclass concentrations and infections in children and adolescents with severe asthma

Cleonir De Moraes Lui; Lea Campos de Oliveira; Constância Lima Diogo; Michael Kirschfink; Anete Sevciovic Grumach

It was the aim of this study to investigate possible dysfunctions of the humoral immune system in asthmatic children with frequent respiratory infections. Forty‐one severe asthmatics (7–15 years of age), classified according to the Second Brazilian Consensus in Asthma (1998), were divided into two groups: group I (n = 12) had recurrent respiratory infections; and group II (n = 29) were without recurrent respiratory infections. Immunoglobulin (Ig)G, IgA and IgM levels (nephelometry), and IgE (radioimmunoassay) and IgG subclasses (enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay), were evaluated using standard methods. Asthmatics with recurrent infections presented with worse clinical evolution, an increased number of hospital admissions, and a higher need of medication than the children without recurrent infections. There were no significant differences between the mean values of IgG, IgA or IgM levels, or IgE or IgG subclasses, in patients of both groups. A complete IgA deficiency was detected in two patients of group I (one was associated with IgG subclass deficiency). Deficiency of one or more IgG subclasses was verified in eight of 12 (66%) children from group I and in 16/29 (55%) from group II. The following deficiencies were found in both groups: IgG3 (10/41), IgG4 (three of 41), IgG2 (two of 41), IgG1 (one of 41), IgG3‐IgG4 (four of 41), IgG1‐IgG3 (two of 41), and IgG1‐IgG3‐IgG4 (one of 41). There were a higher proportion of children with low IgG4 levels in group I than in group II (p = 0.01). To conclude, IgA and IgG subclass deficiencies were detected in both severely asthmatic groups, with a predominance of IgG3 subclass deficiency. However, low IgG subclass levels appear not to be a suitable predictor of the development of infections in asthmatic children.

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Teresa Caballero

Hospital Universitario La Paz

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Werner Aberer

Medical University of Graz

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