Frontiers in Pediatrics (Jun 2021)

Case Report: DOCK8 Deficiency Without Hyper-IgE in a Child With a Large Deletion

  • Edna Venegas-Montoya,
  • Aidé Tamara Staines-Boone,
  • Luz María Sánchez-Sánchez,
  • Jorge Alberto García-Campos,
  • Rubén Antonio Córdova-Gurrola,
  • Yuridia Salazar-Galvez,
  • David Múzquiz-Zermeño,
  • María Edith González-Serrano,
  • Saul O. Lugo Reyes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.635322
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Autosomal recessive (AR) DOCK8 deficiency is a well-known actinopathy, a combined primary immune deficiency with impaired actin polymerization that results in altered cell mobility and immune synapse. DOCK8-deficient patients present early in life with eczema, viral cutaneous infections, chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis, bacterial pneumonia, and abscesses, together with eosinophilia, thrombocytosis, lymphopenia, and variable dysgammaglobulinemia that usually includes Hyper-IgE. In fact, before its genetic etiology was known, patients were described as having a form of Hyper-IgE syndrome, a name now deprecated in favor of genetic defects. We describe a school-age male patient with a clinical picture suggestive of DOCK8 deficiency, except for high serum IgE or a family history: early onset, failure to thrive, eczema, warts, condyloma, bronchiolitis, pneumonia, recurrent otitis media, bronchiectasis, candidiasis, leukocytosis, eosinophilia, high IgA, low IgG, and low CD4+ T cells. We were able to confirm the diagnosis through protein expression and whole-exome sequencing. We review the clinical, laboratory, and genetic features of 200 DOCK8-deficient patients; at least 4 other patients have had no elevated IgE, and about 40% do not have Hyper-IgE (above 1,000 IU/mL). Despite this, the constellation of signs, symptoms, and findings allow the suspicion of DOCK8 deficiency and other actinopathies.

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