Good's syndrome: brief overview of an enigmatic immune deficiency

Good's syndrome, an infrequent adult‐onset immunodeficiency is characterized by the triad of thymoma, hypogammaglobulinemia, and increased susceptibility to recurrent infections. The clinical presentation is highly variable, with a spectrum ranging from recurrent bacterial and opportunistic inf...

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Veröffentlicht in:APMIS : acta pathologica, microbiologica et immunologica Scandinavica microbiologica et immunologica Scandinavica, 2023-12, Vol.131 (12), p.698-704
Hauptverfasser: Sipos, Ferenc, Műzes, Györgyi
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Good's syndrome, an infrequent adult‐onset immunodeficiency is characterized by the triad of thymoma, hypogammaglobulinemia, and increased susceptibility to recurrent infections. The clinical presentation is highly variable, with a spectrum ranging from recurrent bacterial and opportunistic infections to concomitant autoimmune diseases and, sometimes malignant pathologies. Due to heterogeneous clinical phenotypes and the lack of adequate diagnostic criteria, its recognition is often challenging, even delaying it by years. It is one of the most unusual, less studied form of the immune deficiency syndromes with a still unknown pathophysiology. It was initially considered a thymoma‐associated variant of primary antibody deficiencies with a reduced or absent number of mature B cells, but it later emerged that significant defects of T cell‐mediated immune functions are the underlying cause of opportunistic infections. On the basis of current evidence, Good's syndrome is evaluated as a distinct acquired form of combined immunodeficiency states and classified as a phenocopy of primary immunodeficiency diseases. Epigenetic and acquired genetic factors can play an ultimate role in its evolution.
ISSN:0903-4641
1600-0463
DOI:10.1111/apm.13351