Title Characteristics of Good's Syndrome in China: A Systematic Review
Authors Dong, Jin-Pei
Gao, Wen
Teng, Gui-Gen
Tian, Yu
Wang, Hua-Hong
Affiliation Peking Univ, Hosp 1, Dept Gastroenterol, Beijing 100034, Peoples R China.
Keywords Agammaglobulinemia
Diarrhea
Good's Syndrome
Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes
Thymoma
RED-CELL APLASIA
PRIMARY HYPOGAMMAGLOBULINEMIA
THYMOMA
IMMUNODEFICIENCY
PATIENT
TUBERCULOSIS
INFECTION
Issue Date 2017
Publisher Chinese Medical Journal
Citation CHINESE MEDICAL JOURNAL.2017,130(13),1604-1609.
Abstract Background: Good's syndrome (GS) is a rare disease characterized by thymoma, hypogammaglobulinemia, low or absent B-cells, decreased T-cells, an inverted CD4+/CD8+ T-cell ratio and reduced T-cell mitogen proliferative responses. GS is difficult to diagnose preoperatively due to its rarity and lack of typical symptoms, the characteristics of Chinese GS patients are still lacking. This study aimed to systematically review all the clinical, laboratory, and immunologic findings of reported cases of Chinese patients with GS. Methods: We searched for case reports and articles up to January 2017 using PubMed, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wangfang database and China Science and Technology Journal Database with the following words in combinations as key words: "thymoma," " hypogammaglobulinemia," and " Good's syndrome." The text words and MeSH terms were entered depending on the databases characteristics. The reference lists from retrieved articles were also screened for additional applicable studies. The authors were restricted to Chinese. There was no language restriction. Results: Forty-seven patients were reported in 27 studies. We found that GS has a nationwide distribution and that most cases (83%) have been described on the mainland of China. The initial clinical presentation is varied, ranging from symptoms related to the thymoma to infections resulting from immunodeficiency. Type AB (50%) is the most common histologic type of thymomas in Chinese GS patients according to the World Health Organization classification of thymomas. With respect to infection, sinopulmonary infection (74%) is the most common type, followed by skin infection (10%) and intestinal tract infection (10%). Diarrhea was presented in 36% of patients, and autoimmune manifestations were presented in 36% of patients. Conclusions: GS is a rare association of thymoma and immunodeficiency with a poor prognosis. Astute clinical acumen and increased awareness of the clinical and immunological profile of GS are needed to increase early diagnosis, that would benefit improved therapeutic effects.
URI http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/472255
ISSN 0366-6999
DOI 10.4103/0366-6999.208234
Indexed SCI(E)
中国科学引文数据库(CSCD)
Appears in Collections: 第一医院

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