Anna Szaflarska
Jagiellonian University Medical College
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Featured researches published by Anna Szaflarska.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014
Benjamin Gathmann; Nizar Mahlaoui; Laurence Gérard; Eric Oksenhendler; Klaus Warnatz; Ilka Schulze; Gerhard Kindle; Taco W. Kuijpers; Rachel T. van Beem; David Guzman; Sarita Workman; Pere Soler-Palacín; Javier de Gracia; Torsten Witte; Reinhold Schmidt; Jiri Litzman; Eva Hlavackova; Vojtech Thon; Michael Borte; Stephan Borte; Dinakantha S. Kumararatne; C. Feighery; Hilary J. Longhurst; Matthew R. Helbert; Anna Szaflarska; Anna Sediva; Bernd H. Belohradsky; Alison Jones; Ulrich Baumann; Isabelle Meyts
BACKGROUND Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is an antibody deficiency with an equal sex distribution and a high variability in clinical presentation. The main features include respiratory tract infections and their associated complications, enteropathy, autoimmunity, and lymphoproliferative disorders. OBJECTIVE This study analyzes the clinical presentation, association between clinical features, and differences and effects of immunoglobulin treatment in Europe. METHODS Data on 2212 patients with CVID from 28 medical centers contributing to the European Society for Immunodeficiencies Database were analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS Early disease onset (<10 years) was very frequent in our cohort (33.7%), especially in male subjects (39.8%). Male subjects with early-onset CVID were more prone to pneumonia and less prone to other complications suggesting a distinct disease entity. The diagnostic delay of CVID ranges between 4 and 5 years in many countries and is particularly high in subjects with early-onset CVID. Enteropathy, autoimmunity, granulomas, and splenomegaly formed a set of interrelated features, whereas bronchiectasis was not associated with any other clinical feature. Patient survival in this cohort was associated with age at onset and age at diagnosis only. There were different treatment strategies in Europe, with considerable differences in immunoglobulin dosing, ranging from 130 up to 750 mg/kg/mo. Patients with very low trough levels of less than 4 g/L had poor clinical outcomes, whereas higher trough levels were associated with a reduced frequency of serious bacterial infections. CONCLUSION Patients with CVID are being managed differently throughout Europe, affecting various outcome measures. Clinically, CVID is a truly variable antibody deficiency syndrome.
Molecular Immunology | 2008
Hong Jiao; Beáta Tóth; Melinda Erdős; Ingegerd Fransson; Éva Rákóczi; Istvan Balogh; Zoltan Magyarics; Beáta Dérfalvi; Gabriella Csorba; Anna Szaflarska; André Mégarbané; Carlo Akatcherian; Ghassan Dbaibo; Éva Rajnavölgyi; Lennart Hammarström; Juha Kere; Gérard Lefranc; László Maródi
We performed clinical, immunological and genetic studies of 12 hyper-IgE syndrome (HIES) patients from 4 Hungarian, 2 Lebanese, one Russian, one Polish, and one Swedish families with autosomal dominant (AD) or sporadic forms of the disease to reveal cross-ethnicity of recurrent and novel mutations in the signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 gene (STAT3). Four patients from 3 Hungarian families, and one Russian, and one Swedish patient carried the heterozygous R382W germline mutation at the DNA-binding site of STAT3. The recurrent V637M mutation affecting the SRC homology 2 (SH2) domain was detected in one Lebanese and one Polish family, and the V463del deletion located in the DNA-binding domain was unveiled in another Lebanese family. A novel H332Y mutation affecting the DNA-binding site of STAT3 in three Hungarian patients from a Gypsy family was also found. The segregation of this mutation with HIES, restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of STAT3 from patients and controls and the negligible production upon IL-6 stimulation of monocyte chemotactic protein-1 by the patients blood mononuclear cells suggested that the H332Y mutation was disease-causing. These data suggest, that dominant negative mutations of the DNA-binding and SH2 domains of STAT3 cause AD and sporadic cases of HIES in different ethnic groups with R382W as the predominant mutation found in 5 of the 9 families. Functional and genetic data support that the novel H332Y mutation may result in the loss of function of STAT3 and leads to the HIES phenotype.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2013
Xiao-Fei Kong; Guillaume Vogt; Yuval Itan; Anna Macura-Biegun; Anna Szaflarska; Danuta Kowalczyk; Ariane Chapgier; Avinash Abhyankar; Dieter Furthner; Claudia Djambas Khayat; Satoshi Okada; Vanessa L. Bryant; Dusan Bogunovic; Alexandra Y. Kreins; Marcela Moncada-Vélez; Mélanie Migaud; Sulaiman Al-Ajaji; Saleh Al-Muhsen; Steven M. Holland; Laurent Abel; Capucine Picard; Damien Chaussabel; Jacinta Bustamante; Jean-Laurent Casanova; Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis
Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial diseases (MSMD) is a rare syndrome, the known genetic etiologies of which impair the production of, or the response to interferon-gamma (IFN-γ). We report here a patient (P1) with MSMD whose cells display mildly impaired responses to IFN-γ, at levels, however, similar to those from MSMD patients with autosomal recessive (AR) partial IFN-γR2 or STAT1 deficiency. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) and Sanger sequencing revealed only one candidate variation for both MSMD-causing and IFN-γ-related genes. P1 carried a heterozygous frame-shift IFNGR2 mutation inherited from her father. We show that the mutant allele is intrinsically loss-of-function and not dominant-negative, suggesting haploinsufficiency at the IFNGR2 locus. We also show that Epstein-Barr virus transformed B lymphocyte cells from 10 heterozygous relatives of patients with AR complete IFN-γR2 deficiency respond poorly to IFN-γ, in some cases as poorly as the cells of P1. Naive CD4(+) T cells and memory IL-4-producing T cells from these individuals also responded poorly to IFN-γ, whereas monocytes and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) did not. This is consistent with the lower levels of expression of IFN-γR2 in lymphoid than in myeloid cells. Overall, MSMD in this patient is probably due to autosomal dominant (AD) IFN-γR2 deficiency, resulting from haploinsufficiency, at least in lymphoid cells. The clinical penetrance of AD IFN-γR2 deficiency is incomplete, possibly due, at least partly, to the variability of cellular responses to IFN-γ in these individuals.
Molecular Immunology | 2009
Beáta Tóth; Alla Volokha; Alexander Mihas; Małgorzata Pac; Ewa Bernatowska; Irina Kondratenko; A. V. Polyakov; Melinda Erdős; Srdjan Pasic; Michaela Bataneant; Anna Szaflarska; Kristina Mironska; Darko Richter; Katarina Stavrik; Tadej Avcin; Gabriella Márton; Kálmán Nagy; Beáta Dérfalvi; Miklós Szolnoky; Ágnes Kalmár; Michael Belevtsev; Marina Guseva; Aurica Rugina; Gergely Kriván; László Tímár; Zoltán Nyul; Bernadett Mosdósi; Lidija Kareva; Sonja Peova; Liudmyla Chernyshova
Primary immunodeficiency disorders are a recognized public health problem worldwide. The prototype of these conditions is X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) or Brutons disease. XLA is caused by mutations in Brutons tyrosine kinase gene (BTK), preventing B cell development and resulting in the almost total absence of serum immunoglobulins. The genetic profile and prevalence of XLA have not previously been studied in Eastern and Central European (ECE) countries. We studied the genetic and demographic features of XLA in Belarus, Croatia Hungary, Poland, Republic of Macedonia, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Ukraine. We collected clinical, immunological, and genetic information for 122 patients from 109 families. The BTK gene was sequenced from the genomic DNA of patients with a high susceptibility to infection, almost no CD19(+) peripheral blood B cells, and low or undetectable levels of serum immunoglobulins M, G, and A, compatible with a clinical and immunological diagnosis of XLA. BTK sequence analysis revealed 98 different mutations, 46 of which are reported for the first time here. The mutations included single nucleotide changes in the coding exons (35 missense and 17 nonsense), 23 splicing defects, 13 small deletions, 7 large deletions, and 3 insertions. The mutations were scattered throughout the BTK gene and most frequently concerned the SH1 domain; no missense mutation was detected in the SH3 domain. The prevalence of XLA in ECE countries (total population 145,530,870) was found to be 1 per 1,399,000 individuals. This report provides the first comprehensive overview of the molecular genetic and demographic features of XLA in Eastern and Central Europe.
International Journal of Cancer | 2005
Maciej Siedlar; Anna Szaflarska; Antoni M. Szczepanik; Irena Ruggiero; Marion Frankenberger; Rafał Szatanek; Antoni Czupryna; Tadeusz Popiela; Marek Zembala
Our study investigated the ability of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) isolated from patients with different clinical stages of gastric cancer to produce proinflammatory (tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNFα], interleukin 12p40 [IL‐12p40] and interleukin 6 [IL‐6]) and antiinflammatory (interleukin‐10 [IL‐10]) cytokines after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or tumor cells, and its correlation with IL‐1R‐associated kinase‐1 (IRAK‐1) protein expression. The data showed that TNF production by tumor cell–stimulated PBMCs obtained from patients with advanced gastric cancer was significantly depressed in comparison to the control group. The response to LPS was less affected. IL‐12p40 production was depressed in all stages of disease, while the release of IL‐10 and IL‐6 remained unchanged. Depressed tumor cell–induced TNF and IL‐12p40 production was associated with diminished IRAK‐1 protein expression in PBMC. These findings may suggest that in advanced gastric cancer (at least in some cancer patients) diminished IRAK‐1 protein expression may be a novel mechanism responsible for or facilitating downregulation of innate immune response to tumor cells.
Clinical Immunology | 2016
Anne F.M. Jansen; Marcel van Deuren; Joanne Miller; Jiří Litzman; Javier de Gracia; Matías Sáenz-Cuesta; Anna Szaflarska; Timi Martelius; Yuichi Takiguchi; Smita Y. Patel; Siraj Misbah; Anna Simon
Good syndrome (GS) or thymoma-associated immunodeficiency, is a rare condition that has only been studied in retrospective case series. General consensus was that GS has a worse prognosis than other humoral immunodeficiencies. In this study, physicians of GS patients completed two questionnaires with a two year interval with data on 47 patients, 499 patient years in total. Results on epidemiology, disease characteristics, and outcome are presented. Mean age at diagnosis was 60years and median follow-up from onset of symptoms was 9years. There was a high frequency of respiratory tract infections due to encapsulated bacteria. Median survival was 14years. Survival was reduced compared to age-matched population controls (5-year survival: 82% versus 95%, p=0.008). In this cohort survival was not associated with gender (HR 0.9, 95% CI 0.3-3.0), autoimmune diseases (HR 2.9, 95% CI 0.8-10.1) or immunosuppressive use (HR 0.3, 95% CI: 0.1-1.2).
Central European Journal of Immunology | 2015
Anna Pituch-Noworolska; Maciej Siedlar; Danuta Kowalczyk; Anna Szaflarska; Anita Błaut-Szlósarczyk; Katarzyna Zwonarz
Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is a primary immunodeficiency of humoral immunity with heterogeneous clinical features. Diagnosis of CVID is based on hypogammaglobulinaemia, low production of specific antibodies, and disorders of cellular immunity. The standard therapy includes replacement of specific antibodies with human immunoglobulin, prophylaxis, and symptomatic therapy of infections. High prevalence of autoimmunity is characteristic for CVID, most commonly: thrombocytopaenia and neutropaenia, celiac disease, and systemic autoimmune diseases. The study included seven children diagnosed with CVID and treated with immunoglobulin substitution from 2 to 12 years. Thrombocytopenia was diagnosed prior to CVID in four children, developed during immunoglobulin substitution in three children. In one boy with CVID and thrombocytopaenia, haemolytic anaemia occurred, so a diagnosis of Evans syndrome was established. Therapy of thrombocytopaenia previous to CVID included steroids and/or immunoglobulins in high dose, and azathioprine. In children with CVID on regular immunoglobulin substitution, episodes of acute thrombocytopaenia were associated with infections and were treated with high doses of immunoglobulins and steroids. In two patients only chronic thrombocytopaenia was noted. Splenectomy was necessary in one patient because of severe course of thrombocytopaenia. The results of the study indicated a supportive role of regular immunoglobulin substitution in patients with CVID and chronic thrombocytopaenia. However, regular substitution of immunoglobulins in CVID patients did not prevent the occurrence of autoimmune thrombocytopaenia episodes or exacerbations of chronic form. In episodes of acute thrombocytopaenia or exacerbations of chronic thrombocytopaenia, infusions of immunoglobulins in high dose are effective, despite previous regular substitution in the replacing dose.
Pediatria polska | 2009
Anna Szaflarska; Anna Pituch-Noworolska; Danuta Kowalczyk; Marek Zembala; Mirjam van der Burg; Jacques J.M. van Dongen
Summary Omenns syndrome is a rare inherited form of severe combined immunodeficiency associated with high mortality. This report presents the clinical course and laboratory findings in two cousins with Omenn‘s syndrome which were different despite of the identical mutations in RAG1 gene.
Central European Journal of Immunology | 2018
Anna Szaflarska; Magdalena Rutkowska-Zapała; Anna Gruca; Katarzyna Szewczyk; Miroslaw Bik-Multanowski; Marzena Lenart; Marta Surman; Ilona Kopyta; Ewa Głuszkiewicz; Magdalena Machnikowska-Sokołowska; Katarzyna Gruszczyńska; Anna Pituch-Noworolska; Maciej Siedlar
Introduction In this study we describe a patient with gross deletion containing the BTK and TIMM8A genes. Mutations in these genes are responsible for X-linked agammaglobulinemia and Mohr-Tranebjaerg syndrome, respectively. X linked agammaglobulinemia is a rare primary immunodeficiency characterized by low levels of B lymphocytes and recurrent microbial infections, whereas, Mohr-Tranebjaerg syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with early onset of sensorineural deafness. Material and methods For neuroimaging, the magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy of the brain were performed. Microarray analysis was performed to establish the extent of deletion. Results The first clinical symptoms observed in our patient at the age of 6 months were connected with primary humoral immunodeficiency, whereas clinical signs of MTS emerged in the third year of live. Interestingly, the loss of speech ability was not accompanied by hearing failure. Neuroimaging of the brain suggested leukodystrophy. Molecular tests revealed contiguous X-chromosome deletion syndrome encompassing BTK (from exons 6 through 19) and TIMM8A genes. The loss of the patient’s DNA fragment was accurately localized from 100 601 727 to 100 617 576 bp on chromosome’s loci Xq22.1. Conclusions We diagnosed XLA-MTS in the first Polish patient on the basis of particular molecular methods. We detected neurodegenerative changes in MRI and MR spectroscopy in this patient. Our results provide further insight into this rare syndrome.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2017
Marzena Lenart; Anna Gruca; Anna Mueck; Magdalena Rutkowska-Zapała; Marta Surman; Anna Szaflarska; Krzysztof Kobylarz; Jarosław Baran; Maciej Siedlar
Invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells are a small population of thymus-derived T cells that are restricted by non-classical MHC class I molecule CD1d and express an evolutionary conserved TCR with an invariant α-chain. The frequency of iNKT cells in peripheral blood is very low, thus, accurate methods to identify and enumerate iNKT cells are needed. The aim of the study was to compare 6B11 mAb or α-GalCer-loaded CD1d dextramers usage in iNKT cell detection. The frequency of CD3+CD56+ lymphocytes is much higher, with statistical significance (p<0,001), than real iNKT cells detected by 6B11 mAb or α-GalCer-loaded CD1d dextramers. The frequency of iNKT cells, recognized by 6B11 mAb or α-GalCer-loaded CD1d dextramers, was in a similar range. Nonetheless, when we compared whether 6B11+ and α-GalCer-loaded CD1d dextramers+ are the same populations, it turned out that by this approach we were able to identify three distinct subsets of iNKT cells: i) 6B11+/α-GalCer-loaded dextramer- cells, ii) 6B11+/α-GalCer-loaded dextramer+ cells, and iii) 6B11-/α-GalCer-loaded dextramer+. Thus, although 6B11 mAb and α-GalCer-loaded dextramers may identify not exactly the same cells, application of these methods seems to give similar results of iNKT cell frequency in peripheral blood. It seems that both approaches for iNKT detection can be used for precise identification of these cells. Moreover, our results indicate that CD3+CD56+ lymphocytes are a heterogeneous population of T cells, expressing activation markers of both NK and T lymphocytes, yet with not well characterized properties.