- Lin, Connie H;
- Kuehn, Hye Sun;
- Thauland, Timothy J;
- Lee, Christine M;
- De Ravin, Suk See;
- Malech, Harry L;
- Keyes, Timothy J;
- Jager, Astraea;
- Davis, Kara L;
- Garcia-Lloret, Maria I;
- Rosenzweig, Sergio D;
- Butte, Manish J
We report the case of a patient with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (X-SCID) who survived for over 20 years without hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) because of a somatic reversion mutation. An important feature of this rare case included the strategy to validate the pathogenicity of a variant of the IL2RG gene when the T and B cell lineages comprised only revertant cells. We studied the X-inactivation of sorted T cells from the mother to show that the pathogenic variant was indeed the cause of his SCID. One interesting feature was a progressive loss of B cells over 20 years. CyTOF (cytometry time of flight) analysis of bone marrow offered a potential explanation of the B cell failure, with expansions of progenitor populations that suggest a developmental block. Another interesting feature was that the patient bore extensive granulomatous disease and skin cancers that contained T cells, despite severe T cell lymphopenia in the blood. Finally, the patient had a few hundred T cells on presentation but his TCRs comprised a very limited repertoire, supporting the important conclusion that repertoire size trumps numbers of T cells.