Kirsten Bienemann
University of Düsseldorf
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Featured researches published by Kirsten Bienemann.
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.
Haematologica | 2013
Elisabeth Salzer; Svenja Daschkey; Sharon Choo; Michael Gombert; Elisangela Santos-Valente; Sebastian Ginzel; Martina Schwendinger; Oskar A. Haas; Gerhard Fritsch; Winfried F. Pickl; Elisabeth Förster-Waldl; Arndt Borkhardt; Kaan Boztug; Kirsten Bienemann; Markus G. Seidel
CD27, a tumor necrosis factor receptor family member, interacts with CD70 and influences T-, B- and NK-cell functions. Disturbance of this axis impairs immunity and memory generation against viruses including Epstein Barr virus (EBV), influenza, and others. CD27 is commonly used as marker of memory B cells for the classification of B-cell deficiencies including common variable immune deficiency. Flow cytometric immunophenotyping including expression analysis of CD27 on lymphoid cells was followed by capillary sequencing of CD27 in index patients, their parents, and non-affected siblings. More comprehensive genetic analysis employed single nucleotide polymorphism-based homozygosity mapping and whole exome sequencing. Analysis of exome sequencing data was performed at two centers using slightly different data analysis pipelines, each based on the Genome Analysis ToolKit Best Practice version 3 recommendations. A comprehensive clinical characterization was correlated to genotype. We report the simultaneous confirmation of human CD27 deficiency in 3 independent families (8 patients) due to a homozygous mutation (p. Cys53Tyr) revealed by whole exome sequencing, leading to disruption of an evolutionarily conserved cystein knot motif of the transmembrane receptor. Phenotypes varied from asymptomatic memory B-cell deficiency (n=3) to EBV-associated hemophagocytosis and lymphoproliferative disorder (LPD; n=3) and malignant lymphoma (n=2; +1 after LPD). Following EBV infection, hypogammaglobulinemia developed in at least 3 of the affected individuals, while specific anti-viral and anti-polysaccharide antibodies and EBV-specific T-cell responses were detectable. In severely affected patients, numbers of iNKT cells and NK-cell function were reduced. Two of 8 patients died, 2 others underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation successfully, and one received anti-CD20 (rituximab) therapy repeatedly. Since homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing did not reveal additional modifying factors, our findings suggest that lack of functional CD27 predisposes towards a combined immunodeficiency associated with potentially fatal EBV-driven hemo-phagocytosis, lymphoproliferation, and lymphoma development.
Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2014
Sujal Ghosh; Kirsten Bienemann; Kaan Boztug; Arndt Borkhardt
In patients with underlying immunodeficiency, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) may lead to severe immune dysregulation manifesting as fatal mononucleosis, lymphoma, lymphoproliferative disease (LPD), lymphomatoid granulomatosis, hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) and dysgammaglobulinemia. Several newly discovered primary immunodeficiencies (STK4, CD27, MAGT1, CORO1A) have been described in recent years; our group and collaborators were able to reveal the pathogenicity of mutations in the Interleukin-2-inducible T-cell Kinase (ITK) in a cohort of nine patients with most patients presenting with massive EBV B-cell lymphoproliferation. This review summarizes the clinical and immunological findings in these patients. Moreover, we describe the functional consequences of the mutations and draw comparisons with the extensively investigated function of ITK in vitro and in the murine model.
International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2012
Davoud Mansouri; Seyed Alireza Mahdaviani; Soheila Khalilzadeh; Seyed Amir Mohajerani; M. Hasanzad; S. Sadr; Seyed Alireza Nadji; S. Karimi; A. Droodinia; Nima Rezaei; R.M. Linka; Kirsten Bienemann; A. Borkhardt; Mohammad Reza Masjedi; Ali Akbar Velayati
IL-2-inducible T-cell kinase (ITK) deficiency is a rare inherited immunodeficiency disease characterized by homozygous mutations in the ITK gene and the inability to control Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection leading to EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disorders of B cell origin. Many aspects of its clinical presentation and immunologic phenotype are still unclear to clinicians. We report on a 14-year-old female patient with complaints of an 8-month history of cough and fever. Imaging studies revealed diffuse pulmonary nodules and mediastinal lymphadenopathy. Transbronchial lung biopsy showed nonmalignant polyclonal B cell proliferation. High titers of EBV DNA were detected by PCR analysis in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, bone marrow, and blood. Genomic analysis revealed a homozygous single base pair deletion in exon 5 of the ITK gene (c.468delT) in this patient. Treatment with rituximab (anti-CD20 mab) resulted in complete clinical remission with resolution of pulmonary lesions and a negative EBV titer in serum. All patients with EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disorders should be analyzed for mutations in ITK.
British Journal of Haematology | 2011
Klaus Bienemann; Birgit Burkhardt; Simon Modlich; Ulrike Meyer; Anja Möricke; Kirsten Bienemann; Christine Mauz-Körholz; Gabriele Escherich; Martin Zimmermann; Dieter Körholz; Gritta E. Janka-Schaub; Martin Schrappe; Alfred Reiter; Arndt Borkhardt
Children with chromosomal instability syndromes have an increased risk of developing lymphoma and leukaemia. The treatment of these malignancies is hampered by therapy‐associated toxicity and infectious complications. This retrospective analysis evaluated the therapy outcome of 38 children with Ataxia teleangiectasia or Nijmegen‐breakage syndrome with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL, n = 9), Non‐Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL, n = 28) and Hodgkin lymphoma (HL, n = 1). All patients with NHL or ALL were treated in accordance to Berlin‐Frankfurt‐Münster (BFM)‐ or Co‐operative study group for childhood ALL (CoALL)‐oriented chemotherapy schedules. 22 patients received significantly reduced‐intensity chemotherapy. After a median follow‐up of 3·7 years the 10‐year overall survival was 58%. Dosage‐reduction of chemotherapeutic drugs seemed to have no disadvantages and reduced toxic side effects. On the other hand, reduced‐intensity chemotherapy did not prevent second malignancies, which occurred in ten patients with a 10‐year incidence of 25%. After individual treatment approaches three of these patients with second malignancies were in complete clinical remission for more than 5 years. We conclude that BFM‐ or CoALL‐oriented chemotherapy is effective and can be administered in children with AT or NBS. Moreover, we show that even second lymphoid malignancies can successfully be treated in these patients.
Blood | 2014
Nina Kathrin Serwas; Deniz Cagdas; Sol A. Ban; Kirsten Bienemann; Elisabeth Salzer; Ilhan Tezcan; Arndt Borkhardt; Ozden Sanal; Kaan Boztug
To the editor: Idiopathic CD4 lymphopenia represents a heterogeneous group of combined primary immunodeficiencies with markedly reduced CD4+ T-cell counts. Although several genetic etiologies including MHC class II deficiency[1][1] or mutations in RAG1 ,[2][2] MST1 ,[3][3] or LCK [4][4] have been
Histopathology | 2015
Kirsten Bienemann; Arndt Borkhardt; Wolfram Klapper; Ilske Oschlies
Interleukin‐2‐inducible T‐cell kinase (ITK) deficiency is an inherited T‐cell deficiency characterized by the development of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)‐associated lymphoproliferations. We aimed to describe the histopathological features of lymphoproliferative processes arising in ITK deficiency, and to compare them with lymphoproliferations in otherwise immunocompromised patients.
Haematologica | 2016
Cyrill Schipp; Schafiq Nabhani; Kirsten Bienemann; Natalia Simanovsky; Shlomit Kfir-Erenfeld; Nathalie Assayag-Asherie; Prasad T. Oommen; Shoshana Revel-Vilk; Andrea Hönscheid; Michael Gombert; Sebastian Ginzel; Daniel Schäfer; Hans-Jürgen Laws; Eitan Yefenof; Bernhardt Fleckenstein; Arndt Borkhardt; Polina Stepensky; Ute Fischer
The nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells 1 (NF-κB1) is a master regulator of immune and inflammatory responses.[1][1],[2][2] NF-κB1 belongs to the NF-κB/Rel family of transcription factors that consists of five members in humans: NF-κB1 (p105/p50), NF-κB2 (p100/p52
Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2016
Svenja Daschkey; Kirsten Bienemann; Volker Schuster; Hans Wolfgang Kreth; René Martin Linka; Andrea Hönscheid; Gerhard Fritz; Christian Johannes; Bernhard Fleckenstein; Bettina Kempkes; Michael Gombert; Sebastian Ginzel; Arndt Borkhardt
Hereditary defects in several genes have been shown to disturb the normal immune response to EBV and to give rise to severe EBV-induced lymphoproliferation in the recent years. Nevertheless, in many patients, the molecular basis of fatal EBV infection still remains unclear. The Fanconi anemia-associated protein 24 (FAAP24) plays a dual role in DNA repair. By association with FANCM as component of the FA core complex, it recruits the FA core complex to damaged DNA. Additionally, FAAP24 has been shown to evoke ATR-mediated checkpoint responses independently of the FA core complex. By whole exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous missense mutation in the FAAP24 gene (cC635T, pT212M) in two siblings of a consanguineous Turkish family who died from an EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disease after infection with a variant EBV strain, expressing a previously unknown EBNA2 allele.In order to analyze the functionality of the variant FAAP24 allele, we used herpes virus saimiri-transformed patient T cells to test endogenous cellular FAAP24 functions that are known to be important in DNA damage control. We saw an impaired FANCD2 monoubiquitination as well as delayed checkpoint responses, especially affecting CHK1 phosphorylation in patient samples in comparison to healthy controls. The phenotype of this FAAP24 mutation might have been further accelerated by an EBV strain that harbors an EBNA2 allele with enhanced activities compared to the prototype laboratory strain B95.8. This is the first report of an FAAP24 loss of function mutation found in human patients with EBV-associated lymphoproliferation.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2016
Kirsten Bienemann; Svenja Daschkey; Jan Sörensen; Dirk Schwabe; Thomas Klingebiel; Andrea Hönscheid; Michael Gombert; Sebastian Ginzel; Arndt Borkhardt
Kirsten Bienemann, Svenja Daschkey, Jan S€ orensen, Dirk Schwabe, Thomas Klingebiel, Andrea H€ onscheid, Michael Gombert, Sebastian Ginzel and Arndt Borkhardt Pediatric Oncology, Hematology and Clinical Immunology, Heinrich Heine University Medical Center, D€usseldorf, Germany; Clinic for Hematology/Oncology and Clinic for Stem Cell Transplantation and Immunology, University Children’s Hospital, Frankfurt, Germany