Host virus and pneumococcus-specific immune responses in high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis and chronic lymphocytic leukemia: implications for disease progression
Ignacio Criado,
Santiago Muñoz-Criado,
Arancha Rodríguez-Caballero,
Wendy G. Nieto,
Alfonso Romero,
Paulino Fernández-Navarro,
Miguel Alcoceba,
Teresa Contreras,
Marcos González,
Alberto Orfao,
Julia Almeida
Affiliations
Ignacio Criado
Cancer Research Centre (IBMCC, USAL-CSIC), Department of Medicine and Cytometry Service (NUCLEUS), University of Salamanca and IBSAL, Salamanca, Spain.
Santiago Muñoz-Criado
Microbiology Service, University Hospital of Salamanca, Spain.
Arancha Rodríguez-Caballero
Cancer Research Centre (IBMCC, USAL-CSIC), Department of Medicine and Cytometry Service (NUCLEUS), University of Salamanca and IBSAL, Salamanca, Spain.
Wendy G. Nieto
Cancer Research Centre (IBMCC, USAL-CSIC), Department of Medicine and Cytometry Service (NUCLEUS), University of Salamanca and IBSAL, Salamanca, Spain.
Alfonso Romero
Gerencia de Atención Primaria de Salud, Centro de Atención Primaria de Salud Miguel Armijo, Salamanca, Sanidad de Castilla y León (SACYL), Spain.
Paulino Fernández-Navarro
Centro de Atención Primaria de Salud de Ledesma, Salamanca, Sanidad de Castilla y León (SACYL), Spain.
Miguel Alcoceba
Hematology Service, University Hospital of Salamanca, IBMCC, IBSAL and Department of Medicine, University of Salamanca, Spain.
Teresa Contreras
Biochemistry Service, University Hospital of Salamanca, Spain.
Marcos González
Hematology Service, University Hospital of Salamanca, IBMCC, IBSAL and Department of Medicine, University of Salamanca, Spain.
Alberto Orfao
Cancer Research Centre (IBMCC, USAL-CSIC), Department of Medicine and Cytometry Service (NUCLEUS), University of Salamanca and IBSAL, Salamanca, Spain.
Julia Almeida
Cancer Research Centre (IBMCC, USAL-CSIC), Department of Medicine and Cytometry Service (NUCLEUS), University of Salamanca and IBSAL, Salamanca, Spain.
Patients diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) display a high incidence of infections due to an associated immunodeficiency that includes hypogammaglobulinemia. A higher risk of infections has also been recently reported for high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis, while no information is available in low-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis. Here, we evaluated the status of the humoral immune system in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (n=58), as well as in low- (n=71) and high- (n=29) count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis versus healthy donors (n=91). Total free plasma immunoglobulin titers and specific levels of antibodies against cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, influenza and S.pneumoniae were measured by nephelometry and ELISA-based techniques, respectively. Overall, our results show that both CLL and high-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis patients, but not low-count monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis subjects, present with relatively high levels of antibodies specific for the latent viruses investigated, associated with progressively lower levels of S.pneumoniae-specific immunoglobulins. These findings probably reflect asymptomatic chronic reactivation of humoral immune responses against host viruses associated with expanded virus-specific antibody levels and progressively decreased protection against other micro-organisms, denoting a severe humoral immunodeficiency state not reflected by the overall plasma immunoglobulin levels. Alternatively, these results could reflect a potential role of ubiquitous viruses in the pathogenesis of the disease. Further analyses are necessary to establish the relevance of such asymptomatic humoral immune responses against host viruses in the expansion of the tumor B-cell clone and progression from monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis to CLL.