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Multiple drug hypersensitivity: normal Treg cell function but enhanced in vivo activation of drug‐specific T cells
Author(s) -
Daubner B.,
GrouxKeller M.,
Hausmann O. V.,
Kawabata T.,
Naisbitt D. J.,
Park B. K.,
Wendland T.,
Lerch M.,
Pichler W. J.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.363
H-Index - 173
eISSN - 1398-9995
pISSN - 0105-4538
DOI - 10.1111/j.1398-9995.2011.02720.x
Subject(s) - drug , in vivo , medicine , immunology , t cell , treg cell , pharmacology , immune system , biology , il 2 receptor , microbiology and biotechnology
To cite this article: Daubner B, Groux‐Keller M, Hausmann OV, Kawabata T, Naisbitt DJ, Park BK, Wendland T, Lerch M, Pichler WJ. Multiple drug hypersensitivity: normal Treg cell function but enhanced in vivo activation of drug‐specific T cells. Allergy 2012; 67 : 58–66. Abstract Background: Up to 10% of patients with severe immune‐mediated drug hypersensitivity reactions have tendencies to develop multiple drug hypersensitivities (MDH). The reason why certain individuals develop MDH and the underlying pathomechanism are unclear. We investigated different T cell subpopulations in MDH patients and compared them with patients allergic to a single drug and with healthy controls (HC). Methods: We analyzed the in vitro reactivity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from MDH patients ( n = 7), patients with hypersensitivity to a single drug (monoallergic, n = 6), and healthy controls (HD) ( n = 6) to various drugs (mainly antibiotics and antiepileptics). By depleting and selectively re‐adding CD4 + CD25 bright T cells (T regulatory cells, Treg), their effect on drug‐specific T cell reactivity was analyzed. The phenotype of reacting T cells was determined ex vivo by staining for markers of activation (CD38) and cell exhaustion (PD‐1). Results: No functional deficiency of Treg cells was observed in all drug‐allergic patients. Drug‐reactive T cells from MDH patients were found in the CD4 + CD25 dim T cell fraction and showed enhanced CD38 and PD‐1 expression, while those from monoallergic patients reside in the resting CD4 + CD25 neg T cell fraction. Conclusion: In patients with MDH, the drug‐reactive T cells are contained in an in vivo pre‐activated T cell fraction. Therefore, they may show a lower threshold for activation by drugs. The reason for this in vivo T cell pre‐activation needs further investigations.