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FOXN1 immunodeficiency detected by TREC-based newborn screening - a challenge of management?

Immunology letters

Authors: Lea Graafen, Arndt Borkhardt, Julian Reiß, Stavrieta Soura, Hans-Jürgen Laws, Markus Uhrberg, Stefan Paulusch, Elena De Domenico, Marc D Beyer, Sabrina B Bennstein, Sujal Ghosh

Incomplete genotype-phenotype correlations challenge the management of non-SCID FOXN1 immunodeficiency. We describe the detailed clinical course of three distinct newborns with four novel FOXN1 mutations identified by TREC-NBS. For comprehensive immune characterization advanced flow cytometry-based immunophenotyping was employed alongside high-resolution single-cell RNA sequencing. In our cohort, we detected heterozygous FOXN1 mutations in P1 (c.1178delG; p.Gly393Alafs*157) and P2 (c.830+1G>T; p.?), and compound heterozygous FOXN1-mutations in P3 (c.1318C>T; p.Gln440* and c.668T>G; p.?). Despite slow and partial recovery from T-cell lymphocytopenia in P3, clinical signs for classical ´nude SCID` were incomplete. Compared to a healthy cord blood control, a distinct B-cell population was identified in the FOXN1-deficient patients expressing immature B-cell markers and lower HLA-II mRNA levels. In summary, our cohort of three newborns with four novel FOXN1 variants highlights heterogeneous immunological courses and broader thymic dysfunction implications in this rare disease. Structured management strategies are essential for those identified by NBS-programs.

Copyright © 2026. Published by Elsevier B.V.

PMID: 41610918