Autoimmunity Predominates in a Large South African Cohort with Addison's Disease of Mainly European Descent Despite Long-standing Disease and is Associated with HLA DQB*0201
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Objective: We sought to determine whether autoimmunity is the predominant cause of Addison's disease in South Africa and whether human leucocyte antigen (HLA) DQ association exists.
Design: We compiled a national registry of patients from primary care, referral centres and private practices.
Patients: A total of 144 patients, 94 of European descent, 34 Mixed Ancestry, 5 Asian and 11 Black Africans (mean age 45.9 years, range 2.7-88 years; mean duration of disease 13.1 years, range 0-50 years) and controls were matched for gender and ethnicity. All potential causes were investigated.
Results: Fifty one per cent of cases (74 patients) were autoimmune in aetiology. Either 21-hydroxylase autoantibodies (72 patients, 50% of entire patient group) or adrenocortical autoantibodies (35 patients, 24%) were present, while 23% of patients had both. None of the Asian (n = 5) or Black (n = 11) patients had evidence of autoimmune disease. Overall 8% of patients had tuberculosis, 4% adrenoleucodystrophy, 1% adrenocorticotrophic hormone resistance syndrome and 6% X-linked adrenal hypoplasia. In those with autoimmune disease primary hypothyroidism (47%), premature ovarian failure (8%) and type 1 diabetes (7%) were the most prevalent accompanying autoimmune conditions. HLA DQB1*0201 alleles predominated in the autoimmune group (DQB1*0201: 65%vs 43% of controls P = 0.017) with the *0201/*0302 heterozygous genotype being the most prevalent (28%vs 8%P = 0.02).
Conclusions: While autoimmunity accounts for at least half of patients with Addison's disease in South Africa and is associated with HLA DQB1*0201, none of the Black Africans or Asians in this cohort had adrenal autoantibodies. Moreover, 21-hydroxylase autoantibodies were detectable in a higher proportion than adrenocortical autoantibodies, especially in those patients with a long history after disease onset.
Mofokeng T, Beshyah S, Ross I Int J Endocrinol. 2022; 2022:8907864.
PMID: 36060294 PMC: 9433274. DOI: 10.1155/2022/8907864.
Addison's disease associated with hypokalemia: a case report.
Abdalla M, Dave J, Ross I J Med Case Rep. 2021; 15(1):131.
PMID: 33761983 PMC: 7992934. DOI: 10.1186/s13256-021-02724-6.
Mofokeng T, Ndlovu K, Beshyah S, Ross I PLoS One. 2020; 15(11):e0241845.
PMID: 33152017 PMC: 7644036. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241845.
Significant barriers to diagnosis and management of adrenal insufficiency in Africa.
Mofokeng T, Beshyah S, Mahomed F, Ndlovu K, Ross I Endocr Connect. 2020; 9(5):445-456.
PMID: 32348958 PMC: 7274557. DOI: 10.1530/EC-20-0129.
Epidemiology, pathogenesis, and diagnosis of Addison's disease in adults.
Betterle C, Presotto F, Furmaniak J J Endocrinol Invest. 2019; 42(12):1407-1433.
PMID: 31321757 DOI: 10.1007/s40618-019-01079-6.