Hyper-IgE Syndrome (HIES)

Genetics and Pathogenesis
- Hyper-IgE syndrome is a primary immunodeficiency with both autosomal dominant (AD) and autosomal recessive (AR) inheritance patterns.
- Autosomal Dominant HIES (Job Syndrome): Caused by heterozygous pathogenic variants in the STAT3 gene, which act via a dominant negative effect.
- STAT3 pathogenic variants compromise signaling pathways downstream of multiple cytokine receptors (IL-6, IL-10, IL-22), leading to a profound deficiency in T-helper type 17 (Th17) cells.
- The immunologic defect impairs neutrophil chemotaxis and reduces macrophage microbicidal ability due to a failure of helper T-cells to produce interferon-gamma. This skews the immune system toward a Th2 response, triggering massive IgE and histamine overproduction, which blunts classic inflammatory reactions.
- Autosomal Recessive HIES: Most commonly caused by pathogenic variants in the DOCK8 gene, resulting in T-cell lymphopenia, poor T-cell proliferation, and reduced numbers of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and natural killer (NK) cells.
Clinical Manifestations
- Cutaneous: Patients with AD STAT3 deficiency classically present with early-onset, severe, pruritic eczema and recurrent Staphylococcus aureus skin abscesses. Because these abscesses lack the typical warmth, erythema, and tenderness of acute inflammation, they are uniquely termed "cold" abscesses.
- Respiratory: Recurrent bacterial pneumonias frequently result in the formation of large, persistent lung pneumatoceles (cavities). These damaged areas are highly susceptible to secondary opportunistic colonization by Aspergillus species and Pneumocystis jirovecii.
- Other Infections: Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis occurs in over 70% of patients. Patients with the AR DOCK8 variant exhibit a profound susceptibility to severe, disseminated cutaneous viral infections, including herpes simplex, varicella, molluscum contagiosum, and human papillomavirus.
- Facies (STAT3 deficiency): Characteristic facial dysmorphism includes a prominent forehead, deep-set and wide-spaced eyes, a broad nasal bridge, a wide and fleshy nasal tip, and facial asymmetry.
- Skeletal and Connective Tissue (STAT3 deficiency): Non-immunologic features include delayed shedding of primary teeth, joint hyperextensibility, severe scoliosis, and osteopenia leading to recurrent minimal-trauma fractures. Vascular complications such as coronary and cerebral aneurysms may also occur.
Laboratory Diagnosis
- A hallmark finding is an exceptionally high total serum IgE concentration, typically exceeding 2,000 IU/mL, though levels can fluctuate and may occasionally decline in adulthood.
- Serum concentrations of IgG, IgA, and IgM are usually within normal limits.
- Marked eosinophilia is consistently observed in the peripheral blood, sputum, and within histologic sections of affected tissues.
- Flow cytometry generally shows normal absolute percentages of T, B, and NK lymphocytes, but reveals a specific and characteristic absence or severe deficiency of Th17 cells and a decreased percentage of memory T cells (CD45RO).
- In vitro functional testing demonstrates normal T-lymphocyte proliferative responses to mitogens, but a very low or completely absent response to specific recall antigens.
Management
- Therapy is predominantly supportive and aggressively directed at the prevention and early treatment of bacterial and fungal infections.
- Continuous antimicrobial prophylaxis with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is recommended to prevent recurrent Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae infections.
- Antifungal prophylaxis with systemic agents, such as itraconazole, is routinely utilized to prevent invasive Aspergillus and Candida infections.
- Immunoglobulin replacement therapy may be a beneficial adjunctive treatment to assist in infection prevention for selected patients.
- For patients with AR DOCK8 deficiency, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is the definitive and curative treatment of choice, routinely performed early in life to prevent severe long-term complications and malignancy.