Patients with Primary Immunodeficiencies: How Are They at Risk for Fungal Disease?

AbstractPurpose of ReviewIn this review, we focus on the inborn errors of immunity known to render the host susceptible to fungal infections, including candidias, aspergillosis, dermatophytosis, phaeohyphomycosis, pneumocystosis, fusariosis, cryptococcosis, and endemic mycoses.Recent FindingsClassically, the burden of fungal disease in humans is believed to be carried by patients with a secondary immunodeficiency, either due to malignancy, to chemotherapy, to an immunocompromised state post hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, or to treatment with anti-cytokine therapies. However, in the last decade, the study of patients affected by fungal infections without any overt risk factors has led to the unraveling of several monogenic defects of human immunity to fungi. The study of these inborn errors of immunity has added vastly to our comprehension of antifungal immunity. For example, the role of IL-17 immunity in human defense against mucocutaneous candidiasis has been extensively characterized through the analysis of IL-17F, IL-17RA, IL-17Rc, ACT1, ROR γT and, indirectly, CARD9 deficiency.SummaryMany monogenic causes of susceptibility to superficial and/or invasive fungal infections have been recently unraveled. Most of these inborn errors of immunity associate with a specific type of fungal infection, and such a defect should always be suspected and sought in patients affected by fungal infection in the absence of predisposing factors.
Source: Current Fungal Infection Reports - Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research