Back to Glossary
🛡️
Severe combined immunodeficiency
Also known as:SCIDSwiss-type agammaglobulinemiaalymphocytosisbubble boy diseaseSCID
A group of rare inherited immunodeficiencies characterized by profound T- and B-cell dysfunction, leading to extreme vulnerability to infections in early infancy.
- SCID is the most severe primary immunodeficiency—fatal in infancy without treatment. Early detection (newborn TREC screening) allows timely curative therapy (e.g. bone marrow transplant), transforming an otherwise lethal disease.
- Onset at 3–6 months of age (after maternal IgG wanes) with recurrent severe infections: e.g. persistent thrush, chronic diarrhea, Pneumocystis pneumonia; failure to thrive.
- Opportunistic pathogens (fungal, viral, protozoal) and high susceptibility to live vaccine strains (e.g. rotavirus) due to absent T-cell immunity.
- Physical exam: absence of lymphoid tissue (no tonsils, no lymph nodes); absent thymic shadow on chest X-ray (thymic aplasia).
- Lab findings: lymphopenia (especially very low T cells); B cells may be present but nonfunctional (require T help). Newborn screening shows very low/absent TREC levels (T-cell receptor excision circles).
- Maternal IgG protects newborns for ~6 months; consider SCID in infants who appear healthy at birth but then develop severe infections after a few months.
- X-linked SCID (IL2RG gene) is most common (∼50%, only in boys); autosomal recessive forms include ADA deficiency, JAK3 mutation, RAG1/2 mutations, etc., each causing distinct T/B/NK cell absence patterns.
- Differentiate from other causes of T-cell lymphopenia: e.g. DiGeorge syndrome (thymic aplasia) also lacks T cells but presents with cardiac defects & hypocalcemia; HIV infection in infants can cause opportunistic infections but usually has maternal risk factors and positive HIV PCR.
| Condition | Distinguishing Feature |
|---|---|
| DiGeorge syndrome (22q11.2 deletion) | Congenital thymic aplasia → T-cell deficiency, but also cardiac defects and hypocalcemia (not seen in SCID). |
| Perinatal HIV infection | Opportunistic infections in infancy if maternal HIV+, distinguish by maternal history and positive infant HIV PCR. |
| Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome | Combined immunodef with thrombocytopenia & eczema; T cells low but B cells present (high IgE/IgA). |
- Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) as early as possible (ideally in the first 3–4 months) offers cure by reconstituting the immune system.
- Gene therapy has been successful in some SCID types (e.g. IL2RG X-linked SCID, ADA-SCID); ADA deficiency can also be treated with PEG-ADA enzyme replacement.
- Supportive care: IVIG (IV immunoglobulin) to provide antibodies, prophylactic antimicrobials (e.g. TMP-SMX for PCP, antifungals), and strict infection precautions (sterile environment, no live vaccines).
- If SCID is suspected or confirmed, isolate the infant and avoid exposures; even maternal CMV (from breast milk) can be dangerous if donor milk isn't screened.
- The classic "bubble boy" scenario refers to SCID infants kept in sterile isolation.
- Maternal IgG wanes by 3–6 months – that's when SCID manifests with infections (early newborn period is often protected).
- Severe reactions to live vaccines (e.g. disseminated BCG or rotavirus infection) in an infant – red flag for SCID, requires immediate evaluation.
- Infant with persistent thrush, failure to thrive, and recurrent infections – evaluate immediately for SCID (it's a medical emergency).
- Newborn screening (TREC) is low or infant has lymphopenia/infections → suspect SCID and urgently consult immunology.
- Confirm with flow cytometry (absent T cells, ± B/NK cells) and genetic testing for specific mutation.
- Begin protective measures: reverse isolation, no live vaccines, broad prophylaxis (antibacterials, antivirals, antifungals, PCP prophylaxis, IVIG).
- Definitive treatment: prompt HSCT from a matched donor (or gene therapy if available) for long-term cure.
- Infant (~4–6 months old) with oral thrush, chronic diarrhea, Pneumocystis pneumonia, and no thymic shadow on CXR → think SCID (X-linked IL2RG deficiency).
- Newborn develops disseminated infection from a live vaccine (e.g. BCG or rotavirus) → suspect SCID (inability to handle attenuated pathogens).
Case 1
A 4-month-old boy has thrush that won't resolve, chronic diarrhea, and recurrent pneumonia caused by Pneumocystis jirovecii.
Case 2
A 2-month-old girl born to consanguineous parents presents with persistent diarrhea and candidiasis; an older brother died in infancy from severe infections.
🔗 Knowledge Map
Related
🛡️ Severe combined immunodeficiency
📚 References & Sources
- 1StatPearls: Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (Justiz Vaillant & Mohseni, 2023)
- 2UpToDate: Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) – An overview
- 3Medscape: Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) (Hernandez-Ilizaliturri, 2023)
- 4Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 21st ed. (2022) – Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases
- 5Cureus: Severe Combined Immunodeficiency and Its New Treatment Modalities (Wadbudhe et al., 2023)
- 6NIH GARD: Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID)
