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Clinical and Experimental Immunology logoLink to Clinical and Experimental Immunology
. 1996 Dec;106(3):475–480. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.1996.d01-866.x

Relevance of lymphoproliferative disorders and of anti-C1 inhibitor autoantibodies in acquired angio-oedema

M CICARDI 1, A BERETTA 1, M COLOMBO 1, D GIOFFRÉ 1, M CUGNO 1, A AGOSTONI 1
PMCID: PMC2200617  PMID: 8973615

Abstract

We looked for autoantibodies to C1 inhibitor (C1-INH) and evaluated the relationship of their presence to the associated lymphoproliferative diseases and to the cleaved form of C1-INH in 13 patients with acquired C1-INH deficiency (acquired angio-oedema (AAE)). At the time of manifestation of angio-oedema symptoms or within a few years the following diseases were diagnosed: liver angioma (n = 1), M-components (n = 7, one of whom also had echinococcal liver cysts), breast cancer (n = 1), chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL; n = 1); three patients had no associated disease. Anti-C1-INH autoantibodies, measured both as immunoglobulin binding to C1-INH immobilized onto microtitre plates (ELISA) and as plasma inhibitory activity of C1-INH function, were found in 12 patients. Binding of C1-INH to paraproteins, transferred to Immobilon after agarose gel electrophoresis, was detectable in five of seven M-components associated with AAE. Immunoblotting analysis of SDS–PAGE-separated plasma demonstrated that C1-INH circulated in the cleaved 96-kD form in the 12 patients with autoantibodies, but not in the one without. In conclusion, the large majority of our patients have autoantibodies to C1-INH. Circulating autoantibodies are necessary for the generation of cleaved C1-INH. The paraproteins associated with AAE are frequently autoantibodies to C1-INH and thus account for its consumption.

Keywords: C1 inhibitor, acquired angio-oedema, lymphoproliferative disease, autoantibodies

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