Lymphocytes of haemophilia patients treated with clotting factor concentrates display activation-linked cell-surface antigens.

Peripheral blood lymphocytes from 30 patients with haemophilia A were investigated for the expression of six activation-linked cell surface antigens as well as with regard to the relative proportions and total numbers of Leu-3a and Leu-2a positive cells. Twenty-nine of the haemophilia patients showed no clinical symptoms of immunodeficiency or infection whereas one patient presented the typical symptomatology of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The proportions and total numbers of circulating lymphocytes displaying Ia antigens, the p45 protein and/or the two recently defined surface antigens VIP-4 and VIP-5 were significantly increased in haemophilia patients when compared to healthy individuals of the same age group. No such increases could be observed for transferrin receptor and IL-2 receptor expression. After the observation of depressed helper/suppressor T-cell ratios in many haemophiliacs, the expression of activation linked surface antigens represents a further lymphocyte abnormality which resembles the findings in AIDS and its prodromal stages and can also be found in certain viral and parasitic diseases.