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Gain-of-function mutations in ALPK1 cause an NF-κB-mediated autoinflammatory disease: functional assessment, clinical phenotyping and disease course of patients with ROSAH syndrome

Kozycki, Christina Torres; Kodati, Shilpa; Huryn, Laryssa; Wang, Hongying; Warner, Blake M; Jani, Priyam; Hammoud, Dima; Abu-Asab, Mones S; Jittayasothorn, Yingyos; Mattapallil, Mary J; Tsai, Wanxia Li; Ullah, Ehsan; Zhou, Ping; Tian, Xiaoying; Soldatos, Ariane; Moutsopoulos, Niki; Kao-Hsieh, Marie; Heller, Theo; Cowen, Edward W; Lee, Chyi-Chia Richard; Toro, Camilo; Kalsi, Shelley; Khavandgar, Zohreh; Baer, Alan; Beach, Margaret; Long Priel, Debra; Nehrebecky, Michele; Rosenzweig, Sofia; Romeo, Tina; Deuitch, Natalie; Brenchley, Laurie; Pelayo, Eileen; Zein, Wadih; Sen, Nida; Yang, Alexander H; Farley, Gary; Sweetser, David A; Briere, Lauren; Yang, Janine; de Oliveira Poswar, Fabiano; Schwartz, Ida; Silva Alves, Tamires; Dusser, Perrine; Koné-Paut, Isabelle; Touitou, Isabelle; Titah, Salah Mohamed; van Hagen, Petrus Martin; van Wijck, Rogier T A; van der Spek, Peter J; Yano, Hiromi; Benneche, Andreas; Apalset, Ellen M; Jansson, Ragnhild Wivestad; Caspi, Rachel R; Kuhns, Douglas Byron; Gadina, Massimo; Takada, Hidetoshi; Ida, Hiroaki; Nishikomori, Ryuta; Verrecchia, Elena; Sangiorgi, Eugenio; Manna, Raffaele; Brooks, Brian P; Sobrin, Lucia; Hufnagel, Robert; Beck, David; Shao, Feng; Ombrello, Amanda K; Aksentijevich, Ivona; Kastner, Daniel L
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:, is an autoinflammatory disease. METHODS:mutations on protein function and immune signalling. RESULTS:T237M mutation exhibited subclinical inflammation.Clinical features not conventionally attributed to inflammation were also common in the cohort and included short dental roots, enamel defects and decreased salivary flow. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:and some features of disease are amenable to immunomodulatory therapy.
PMID: 35868845
ISSN: 1468-2060
CID: 5279482

156 Cutaneous spectrum of VEXAS syndrome [Meeting Abstract]

Ahmad, S; Ferrada, M; Beck, D B; Wilson, L L; Grayson, P C; Cowen, E W
VEXAS (Vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, Autoinflammatory, Somatic) syndrome is a newly described disease due to somatic mutations in UBA1, encoding ubiquitin-activating enzyme 1. Patients with VEXAS syndrome have hematologic features, such as macrocytic anemia and myelodysplastic syndrome, and systemic inflammation, including cutaneous involvement. Our aim was to characterize the spectrum of skin manifestations in a large cohort of patients with VEXAS. 87 males and 1 female with genetically confirmed VEXAS syndrome were included in this retrospective study. Mean age at disease onset was 64 years (range 39-78). Most patients (n=71, 81%) had skin involvement. Initial disease presentation was confined to skin in 16 patients (18.2%) or to skin with systemic features in 19 (21%) patients. Skin lesions were painful/tender (n=15, 21.1%) or pruritic (n=13, 18.3%), characterized by erythema (n=20, 28.2%) or nodules (n=17, 23.9%), and occurred most frequently in an acral distribution (n=25, 35.2%). 110 skin biopsies were performed in 45 patients. Skin biopsies were interpreted as small or medium vessel vasculitis (n=29, 26.4%), Sweet syndrome (n=24, 21.8%), connective tissue disease (n=9, 8.2%), or erythema nodosum (n=7, 6.4%). Histologic review of 11 cases identified a neutrophilic predominance (n=6, 54.5%) in the epidermis (n=2, 18.2%), papillary dermis (n=6, 54.5%) and reticular dermis (n=5, 45.5%). Skin lesions improved with glucocorticoids in 85.5% of patients (n=47/55), but relapse after tapering was common (60%, n=33/55). Severe injection site reactions to anakinra were frequent (64.3%, n=9/14). Skin lesions are a common, early feature of VEXAS syndrome and share similarities in clinical and histologic presentation with other inflammatory skin disease. Appreciation of the spectrum of skin findings in VEXAS will facilitate early diagnosis.
Copyright
EMBASE:2019237063
ISSN: 1523-1747
CID: 5291952

VEXAS syndrome with systemic lupus erythematosus- expanding the spectrum of associated conditions [Letter]

Sharma, Aman; Naidu, Gsrsnk; Deo, Prateek; Beck, David B
Vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic (VEXAS) syndrome was recently identified by genotype-driven approach. This syndrome is characterised by the presence of somatic mutations affecting methionine-41 (p.Met41) in UBA1 gene. All the identified patients were adult males who had recurrent fevers, cytopenias, dysplastic bone marrow with vacuoles in myeloid and erythroid precursors, neutrophilic skin and lung tissue inflammation and often had treatment refractory and fatal disease course. The various phenotypes reported with VEXAS syndrome include relapsing polychondritis, giant cell arteritis, polyarteritis nodosa, Sweet's syndrome, myelodysplastic syndrome and multiple myeloma.
PMID: 34463053
ISSN: 2326-5205
CID: 5007032

Adult-onset autoinflammation caused by somatic mutations in UBA1: A Dutch case series of patients with VEXAS

van der Made, Caspar I; Potjewijd, Judith; Hoogstins, Annemiek; Willems, Huub P J; Kwakernaak, Arjan J; de Sevaux, Ruud G L; van Daele, Paul L A; Simons, Annet; Heijstek, Marloes; Beck, David B; Netea, Mihai G; van Paassen, Pieter; Elizabeth Hak, A; van der Veken, Lars T; van Gijn, Marielle E; Hoischen, Alexander; van de Veerdonk, Frank L; Leavis, Helen L; Rutgers, Abraham
BACKGROUND:A novel autoinflammatory syndrome was recently described in male patients who harbored somatic mutations in the X-chromosomal UBA1 gene. These patients were characterized by adult-onset, treatment-refractory inflammation with fever, cytopenia, dysplastic bone marrow, vacuoles in myeloid and erythroid progenitor cells, cutaneous and pulmonary inflammation, chondritis, and vasculitis, which is abbreviated as VEXAS. OBJECTIVE:This study aimed to (retrospectively) diagnose VEXAS in patients who had previously been registered as having unclassified autoinflammation. We furthermore aimed to describe clinical experiences with this multifaceted, complex disease. METHODS:A systematic reanalysis of whole-exome sequencing data from a cohort of undiagnosed patients with autoinflammation from academic hospitals in The Netherlands was performed. When no sequencing data were available, targeted Sanger sequencing was applied in cases with high clinical suspicion of VEXAS. RESULTS:A total of 12 male patients who carried mutations in UBA1 were identified. These patients presented with adult-onset (mean age 67 years, range 47-79 years) autoinflammation with systemic symptoms, elevated inflammatory parameters, and multiorgan involvement, most typically involving the skin and bone marrow. Novel features of VEXAS included interstitial nephritis, cardiac involvement, stroke, and intestinal perforation related to treatment with tocilizumab. Although many types of treatment were initiated, most patients became treatment-refractory, with a high mortality rate of 50%. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:VEXAS should be considered in the differential diagnosis of males with adult-onset autoinflammation characterized by systemic symptoms and multiorgan involvement. Early diagnosis can prevent unnecessary diagnostic procedures and provide better prognostic information and more suitable treatment options, including stem cell transplantation.
PMID: 34048852
ISSN: 1097-6825
CID: 5006982

Gain-of-function mutations in ALPK1 cause an NF-kappa B-mediated autoinflammatory disease: functional assessment, clinical phenotyping and disease course of patients with ROSAH syndrome

Kozycki, Christina Torres; Kodati, Shilpa; Huryn, Laryssa; Wang, Hongying; Warner, Blake M.; Jani, Priyam; Hammoud, Dima; Abu-Asab, Mones S.; Jittayasothorn, Yingyos; Mattapallil, Mary J.; Tsai, Wanxia Li; Ullah, Ehsan; Zhou, Ping; Tian, Xiaoying; Soldatos, Ariane; Moutsopoulos, Niki; Kao-Hsieh, Marie; Heller, Theo; Cowen, Edward W.; Lee, Chyi-Chia Richard; Toro, Camilo; Kalsi, Shelley; Khavandgar, Zohreh; Baer, Alan; Beach, Margaret; Long Priel, Debra; Nehrebecky, Michele; Rosenzweig, Sofia; Romeo, Tina; Deuitch, Natalie; Brenchley, Laurie; Pelayo, Eileen; Zein, Wadih; Sen, Nida; Yang, Alexander H.; Farley, Gary; Sweetser, David A.; Briere, Lauren; Yang, Janine; de Oliveira Poswar, Fabiano; Schwartz, Ida; Silva Alves, Tamires; Dusser, Perrine; Kone-Paut, Isabelle; Touitou, Isabelle; Titah, Salah Mohamed; van Hagen, Petrus Martin; van Wijck, Rogier T. A.; van der Spek, Peter J.; Yano, Hiromi; Benneche, Andreas; Apalset, Ellen M.; Jansson, Ragnhild Wivestad; Caspi, Rachel R.; Kuhns, Douglas Byron; Gadina, Massimo; Takada, Hidetoshi; Ida, Hiroaki; Nishikomori, Ryuta; Verrecchia, Elena; Sangiorgi, Eugenio; Manna, Raffaele; Brooks, Brian P.; Sobrin, Lucia; Hufnagel, Robert; Beck, David; Shao, Feng; Ombrello, Amanda K.; Aksentijevich, Ivona; Kastner, Daniel L.
ISI:000830044200001
ISSN: 0003-4967
CID: 5303042

Somatic Mutations in UBA1 Define a Distinct Subset of Relapsing Polychondritis Patients With VEXAS

Ferrada, Marcela A; Sikora, Keith A; Luo, Yiming; Wells, Kristina V; Patel, Bhavisha; Groarke, Emma M; Ospina Cardona, Daniela; Rominger, Emily; Hoffmann, Patrycja; Le, Mimi T; Deng, Zuoming; Quinn, Kaitlin A; Rose, Emily; Tsai, Wanxia L; Wigerblad, Gustaf; Goodspeed, Wendy; Jones, Anne; Wilson, Lorena; Schnappauf, Oskar; Laird, Ryan S; Kim, Jeff; Allen, Clint; Sirajuddin, Arlene; Chen, Marcus; Gadina, Massimo; Calvo, Katherine R; Kaplan, Mariana J; Colbert, Robert A; Aksentijevich, Ivona; Young, Neal S; Savic, Sinisa; Kastner, Daniel L; Ombrello, Amanda K; Beck, David B; Grayson, Peter C
OBJECTIVE:Somatic mutations in UBA1 cause a newly defined syndrome known as VEXAS (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic syndrome). More than 50% of patients currently identified as having VEXAS met diagnostic criteria for relapsing polychondritis (RP), but clinical features that characterize VEXAS within a cohort of patients with RP have not been defined. We undertook this study to define the prevalence of somatic mutations in UBA1 in patients with RP and to create an algorithm to identify patients with genetically confirmed VEXAS among those with RP. METHODS:Exome and targeted sequencing of UBA1 was performed in a prospective observational cohort of patients with RP. Clinical and immunologic characteristics of patients with RP were compared based on the presence or absence of UBA1 mutations. The random forest method was used to derive a clinical algorithm to identify patients with UBA1 mutations. RESULTS:/μl differentiated VEXAS-RP from RP with 100% sensitivity and 96% specificity. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Mutations in UBA1 were causal for disease in a subset of patients with RP. This subset of patients was defined by disease onset in the fifth decade of life or later, male sex, ear/nose chondritis, and hematologic abnormalities. Early identification is important in VEXAS given the associated high mortality rate.
PMID: 33779074
ISSN: 2326-5205
CID: 5006972

Clinical Heterogeneity of the VEXAS Syndrome: A Case Series

Koster, Matthew J; Kourelis, Taxiarchis; Reichard, Kaaren K; Kermani, Tanaz A; Beck, David B; Cardona, Daniela Ospina; Samec, Matthew J; Mangaonkar, Abhishek A; Begna, Kebede H; Hook, C Christopher; Oliveira, Jennifer L; Nasr, Samih H; Tiong, Benedict K; Patnaik, Mrinal M; Burke, Michelle M; Michet, Clement J; Warrington, Kenneth J
The objective of this study is to describe the clinical features and outcomes of patients with the newly defined vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic (VEXAS) syndrome. Nine men with somatic mutations in the UBA1 gene were identified; the most frequent variant was p.Met41Thr (7 of 9, 78%). The median age at VEXAS diagnosis was 74 (67, 76.5) years, and patients had a median duration of symptoms for 4 years before diagnosis. Refractory constitutional symptoms (88%), ear and nose chondritis (55%), and inflammatory arthritis (55%) were common clinical features. Vasculitis was noted in 44%. All patients had significantly elevated inflammatory markers and macrocytic anemia. Thrombocytopenia was present in 66% at diagnosis of VEXAS. Eight patients had bone marrow biopsies performed. All bone marrows were hypercellular, and there was vacuolization of the erythroid (100%) or myeloid precursors (75%). Glucocorticoids attenuated symptoms at prednisone doses ≥20 mg per day, but no other immunosuppressive agent showed consistent long-term control of disease. One patient with coexisting plasma-cell myeloma received plasma-cell-directed therapy with improvement of the inflammatory response, which is a novel finding. In conclusion, VEXAS syndrome is a clinically heterogeneous, treatment-refractory inflammatory condition caused by somatic mutation of the UBA1 gene. Patients often present with overlapping rheumatologic manifestations and persistent hematologic abnormalities. As such, internists and subspecialists, including pathologists, should be aware of this condition to avert diagnostic delay, now that the etiology of this syndrome is known.
PMID: 34489099
ISSN: 1942-5546
CID: 5007042

Benign and malignant hematologic manifestations in patients with VEXAS syndrome due to somatic mutations in UBA1

Obiorah, Ifeyinwa Emmanuela; Patel, Bhavisha A; Groarke, Emma M; Wang, Weixin; Trick, Megan; Ombrello, Amanda K; Ferrada, Marcela A; Wu, Zhijie; Gutierrez-Rodrigues, Fernanda; Lotter, Jennifer; Wilson, Lorena; Hoffmann, Patrycja; Cardona, Daniela Ospina; Patel, Nisha; Dulau-Florea, Alina; Kastner, Daniel L; Grayson, Peter C; Beck, David B; Young, Neal S; Calvo, Katherine R
Somatic mutations in UBA1 involving hematopoietic stem and myeloid cells have been reported in patients with the newly defined VEXAS (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic) syndrome. Here, we report clinical hematologic manifestations and unique bone marrow (BM) features in 16 patients with VEXAS. All patients were male and had a history of severe autoinflammatory and rheumatologic manifestations and a somatic UBA1 mutation (p.Met41). Ten patients had hematologic disorders: myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS; 6 of 16), multiple myeloma (2 of 16), monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (2 of 16), and monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis (2 of 16), and a few of those patients had 2 co-existing clonal processes. Although macrocytic anemia (100%) and lymphopenia (80%) were prevalent in all patients with VEXAS, thrombocytopenia and neutropenia were more common in patients with progression to MDS. All BMs in VEXAS patients had prominent cytoplasmic vacuoles in myeloid and erythroid precursors. In addition, most BMs were hypercellular with myeloid hyperplasia, erythroid hypoplasia, and varying degrees of dysplasia. All patients diagnosed with MDS were lower risk (low blast count, very good to intermediate cytogenetics) according to standard prognostic scoring with no known progression to leukemia. In addition, 10 of 16 patients had thrombotic events, including venous thromboembolism and arterial stroke. Although VEXAS presents symptomatically as a rheumatologic disease, morbidity and mortality are associated with progression to hematologic disease. Given the increased risk of developing MDS and multiple myeloma, surveillance for disease progression is important.
PMCID:8405186
PMID: 34427584
ISSN: 2473-9537
CID: 5007022

Vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic (VEXAS) syndrome: fevers, myalgia, arthralgia, auricular chondritis, and erythema nodosum [Case Report]

Dehghan, Natasha; Marcon, Krista M; Sedlic, Tony; Beck, David B; Dutz, Jan P; Chen, Luke Y C
PMID: 34391501
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 5007012

Vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic (VEXAS) syndrome-clinical presentation of a newly described somatic, autoinflammatory syndrome [Case Report]

Alhomida, Faris; Beck, David B; George, Tracy I; Shaffer, Andrew; Lebiedz-Odrobina, Dorota; Kovacsovics, Tibor; Madigan, Lauren M
PMCID:8313797
PMID: 34337120
ISSN: 2352-5126
CID: 5007002