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. 2014 Aug 25;60(4):1453–1454. doi: 10.1002/hep.26999

Exposure to occupational antigens might predispose to IgG4‐related disease

Lucas J Maillette de Buy Wenniger 1,, Emma L Culver 2,, Ulrich Beuers 1,
PMCID: PMC4258085  PMID: 24407836

Abbreviations

IAC

IgG4‐associated cholangitis

IgG4‐RD

IgG4‐related disease

PSC

primary sclerosing cholangitis

To the Editor:

IgG4‐associated cholangitis (IAC) and autoimmune pancreatitis are the predominant manifestations of IgG4‐related diseases (IgG4‐RD); their pathogenesis is enigmatic.1, 2 Serum IgG4 concentrations are generally elevated in IgG4‐RD but the biological implications thereof have not been explained.3 IgG4, traditionally regarded as a regulatory antibody, has been consistently reported to be upregulated in chronic immune stimulation, as illustrated by an elevation of bee‐venom‐specific IgG4 in beekeepers.4 As reported in this journal, we recently found clonal expansions of IgG4‐switched B‐cells in patients with IAC, using a novel next‐generation sequencing protocol.5 That led us to speculate that chronic antigenic stimulation underlies the often tremendously elevated levels of serum IgG4 in IgG4‐RD. As it was our clinical impression that blue‐collar workers were dominating our cohort of IAC patients, we hypothesized that chronic occupational antigen exposure could play a crucial pathogenetic role for the mainly elderly male IgG4‐RD patients.

Using a questionnaire, we carefully investigated the job history of our mostly retired IgG4‐RD patients. Of 25 patients with IAC and/or autoimmune pancreatitis, 88% had a history of blue‐collar work of at least 1 year, but often of a whole career (Table 1: e.g., building contractors, plumbers), much more than could be expected on the basis of historical Dutch occupational records. Chronic exposure to solvents, industrial and metal dusts, and pigments and oils used in the automotive industry were among the most frequent potential occupational hazards. In comparison, among a disease control cohort of 21 patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), a male‐predominant disease with similar clinical characteristics, only 14% reported a history of working in a blue‐collar profession.

Table 1.

Job History and Occupational Exposures of the Amsterdam Cohort of Patients With IgG4‐RD (IgG4‐Associated Cholangitis, Autoimmune Pancreatitis)

Job history of 25 patients from the Amsterdam cohort (> 1 year) Recalled regular occupational exposures (> 1 year)
1. Musician, painter, metal worker, carpenter solvents, car paint, metal, pigments
2. Carpenter solvents, sawdust, wood, chipboard
3. Glass worker, project manager at multinational glass dust, glass components, lead, barium, cobalt, nickel, lead, silica, industrial dust, building sites
4. Plasterer solvents, chalk dust, sawdust, wood, chipwood
5. Industrial warehouse forklift driver unknown (deceased)
6. Industrial fuel/waste oil laboratory, skipper solvents, crude oil, ship waste oil, chemicals
7. Miner, tiler, bath superintendent solvents, silica dust, mine dust, asbestos, glue
8. Metal worker, textile worker solvents, metal dust, textiles, pigments, paints
9. Shipping solvents, asbestos, crude oil
10. Painter, army officer, flight arrangements, tomato farmer solvents, paint, pigments, kerosene, pesticides, friction plate dust
11. Painter solvents, paint, pigments, dust
12. Small machine factory owner solvents, car paint, metal dust, asbestos, oils
13. Builder, plumber plumbing materials, dust, sawdust, glue, lead
14. Self‐employed optometrist lense glass dust, lense plastic dust, acetone
15. Carpenter solvents, sawdust, clipboard, glue
16. Bricklayer, industrial cleaner of house walls solvents, silica dust, concrete dust, brick dust, asbestos
17. Mud worker, shipping, mud industry manager solvents, oil products, dust
18. Builder, painter solvents, sawdust, clipboard, paints
19. Car industry worker solvents, oil products
20. Historian, rebuilt 3 houses during last 20 years solvents, sawdust, silica dust, paint
21. Builder, wall miller solvents, sawdust, silica dust, dust
22. Hospital cleaner cleaning products
23. Teacher no known exposures
24. Nurse no known exposures
25. Unknown (deceased) unknown (deceased)

Using the same questionnaire, a trial nurse blinded to our hypothesis and the Amsterdam results replicated this investigation among the Oxford cohort of 44 patients with established IgG4‐RD. It was found that 61% of the patients had blue‐collar professions and recalled chronic exposures to potentially harmful compounds. Again, intensive and prolonged exposure to solvents, industrial dusts, pesticides, or industrial oils or polymers was reported by 52% of IgG4‐RD patients. In a control cohort of 27 PSC patients from Oxford with elevated serum IgG4 (>1.4 g/L) and no histological evidence of IAC, the percentage of blue‐collar workers was 22%. Among the PSC patients, 7% reported any (often incidental) exposure to these compounds.

Our earlier finding of clonal expansions of IgG4‐switched B cells in patients with IgG4‐RD5 is compatible with the presence of an antigen‐driven immune process in these individuals. Given our observed high rate of chronic occupational exposure of two independent cohorts of IgG4‐RD patients suggests that chronic exposure to occupational antigens may play a role in the initiation and/or maintenance of IgG4‐RD in susceptible individuals.

Lucas J. Maillette de Buy Wenniger, M.D.1*
Emma L. Culver, M.D.2*
Ulrich Beuers, M.D.1
1Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research
Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
Oxford University
Oxford, UK

Potential conflict of interest: Nothing to report.

[The copyright line for this article was changed on July 20, 2015, after original online publication.]

References

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