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Haploinsufficiency of A20 (HA20) is a primary immune regulation disease caused by heterozygous loss-of-function variants in TNFAIP3, resulting in unchecked inflammatory signaling. HA20 is a highly heterogeneous disorder with overlapping features of autoinflammation, autoimmunity, immunodeficiency, atopy, and lymphoproliferation. Most patients develop symptoms in early childhood mimicking Behcet’s disease, inflammatory bowel disease, periodic fevers with aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and adenopathy (PFAPA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), autoimmune hepatitis, vasculitis, and other conditions. This phenotypic variability contributes to diagnostic delays. Diagnosis requires identification of a pathogenic TNFAIP3 variant or deletion encompassing TNFAIP3: most are null, but missense variant interpretation remains challenging. After diagnosis, we use comprehensive clinical laboratory studies, imaging, and multidisciplinary evaluations to screen for complications. Treatment is guided by clinical phenotype and biomarkers. Colchicine and PDE4 inhibitors may control mild disease, whereas IL-1, TNF, and JAK inhibitors are often necessary for moderate-severe cases. Acute withdrawal of immunosuppression can precipitate disease flares. Genetic counseling and evaluation of at-risk family members are essential.

Haploinsufficiency of A20 (HA20) is an autosomal-dominant immune dysregulation disease first described in 2016 (1). Prior to this, A20 variants had been identified as risk alleles for various autoimmune and autoinflammatory diseases (e.g., inflammatory bowel disease [IBD], rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and type 1 diabetes) (2). A20 is a negative regulator of inflammation encoded by the tumor necrosis factor α-induced protein 3 gene (TNFAIP3). Heterozygous loss-of-function TNFAIP3 variants therefore result in unchecked immune activation initially described as a predominantly Behcet’s-like systemic autoinflammatory disease (SAID). However, given the diverse roles of A20 in immune function, autoimmunity, immunodeficiency, atopy, and malignancy are also common among patients with HA20 (3, 4). Even within families, there is marked heterogeneity, and no definitive genotype–phenotype associations have been recognized so far (5). This disease heterogeneity inherently causes diagnostic delays, with molecular genetic testing at a median of 7 years after symptom onset (4).

The true prevalence of HA20 is unknown, but to date ∼200 cases have been reported worldwide, linked to about 100 distinct pathogenic variants. Analysis of population databases indicates the collective prevalence of individually rare (minor allele frequency [MAF] <0.01%) null TNFAIP3 variants, which are classified as “pathogenic very strong” (PVS1) by American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG), Bethesda, MD, USA, standards, may be as high as ∼1:14,000. This suggests that ∼500,000 individuals may carry disease-causal TNFAIP3 variants (6). Hence, HA20 is likely vastly underrecognized despite clear implications for disease monitoring and treatment. Given the paucity of validated clinical criteria and guidelines for diagnosing, monitoring, or treating HA20, this review aims to highlight key principles in our approach to patients with known or suspected HA20.

A20 is encoded by the TNFAIP3 gene on chromosome 6 (2). In its fully translated form, A20 is a 790–amino acid ubiquitin-editing enzyme that modifies polyubiquitin chains on various immune signaling proteins. Structurally, the protein is composed of an ovarian tumor (OTU) domain and seven zinc-finger (ZnF) domains, which collectively mediate ubiquitin editing. In most cell types, A20 is minimally expressed in the resting homeostatic state but is induced during immune activation, functioning as an essential negative regulator of inflammation (7).

A20 exerts its ubiquitin-editing functions via coordinated activity of its OTU and ZnF domains. The N-terminal OTU domain removes activating K63-linked polyubiquitin chains from signaling adaptors and is required for the recruitment of E2 enzymes like Ubc13 and UbcH5c (8). The ZnF4 domain is a scaffold that supports K48-linked ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of inflammatory signaling molecules via interactions with adaptor proteins (e.g., TAX1BP1) and E3 ligases (e.g., Itch and RNF11) (9). A20 does not directly interact with E2 enzymes but is required for binding to key substrates (10). The C-terminal ZnF7 domain binds M1-linked (linear) ubiquitin chains, recruiting A20 to the TNF signaling complex, where it disrupts NEMO–LUBAC interactions to repress NF-κB activation (11). A20 also has non-catalytic interactions with binding partners (e.g., NEMO and TRAF2) that can disrupt E2–E3 enzyme complexes, which is an additional mechanism that terminates inflammatory signaling (8).

A20 is best characterized as a negative regulator of NF-κB signaling (Fig. 1) (7, 12). Loss of A20 renders cells hypersensitive to various inflammatory stimuli, resulting in increased production of NF-κB–induced cytokines, including TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6, and IL-8. A20 also regulates NLRP3 inflammasome activity and related processes like necroptosis (13, 14, 15). Finally, A20 may influence interferon signaling pathways by modulating STAT1 levels and pathogen double-stranded RNA sensing (16, 17, 18, 19).

As expected from these multifunctional roles, loss of A20 results in global immune dysregulation, including autoinflammation, autoimmunity, immunodeficiency, atopy, and malignancy (Fig. 1). Most reported TNFAIP3 variants in patients are predicted loss of function (e.g., stop-gained and frameshift); missense mutations are also reported to cause HA20, but data for some variants have been contradictory, and better assays are needed to diagnose HA20 in patients with potentially deleterious missense variants (4).

HA20 was first described in 2016 in a case series of six unrelated families with Behcet’s disease (BD)–like features (1). Since then, epidemiologic studies and case reports have demonstrated significant clinical heterogeneity (4, 20, 21). Because HA20 was initially described as a BD-like disease, current reports likely overrepresent patients with BD-like clinical features, as these individuals are more frequently selected for TNFAIP3 testing. Table 1 summarizes reported disease features using data from three published reviews (3, 4, 21) and from an international multicenter cohort from our group describing 185 cases assessed longitudinally in 41 clinics and seven countries (22). Some overlap exists between cohorts.

Most patients with HA20 develop symptoms before age 10 (median 3–4 years) and as early as infancy. The most common symptoms include orogenital ulcers, recurrent fever, rash, arthritis, lymphadenopathy, IBD-like symptoms, and autoimmunity. Primary immune regulation disease (PIRD) should be suspected among patients with early childhood onset presentations, unusually refractory or severe disease, or accrual of seemingly unrelated immunologic diagnoses over time. Categorizing diagnoses by immunopathogenic endotype (autoinflammatory, autoimmune, atopic, lymphoproliferative, immunodeficient, and nonimmune) can help identify and stratify potential PIRDs like HA20. For these reasons, a detailed history is essential in calibrating suspicion for HA20. History should begin with the prenatal course, infancy, and childhood, with attention to growth and development, infection frequency and severity, and vaccine reactions in addition to typical symptoms like recurrent fevers or oral ulcers. Once HA20 is suspected, a detailed family history should be obtained seeking an autosomal-dominant pattern of immune dysregulation. Because de novo germline mutations can also cause HA20, a negative family history should not preclude genetic testing.

HA20 is a genetically defined disease: as such, the diagnosis should not be made based on a compatible clinical history without confirmatory genetic testing (Fig. 2). Because the phenotypic spectrum of HA20 is broad and can overlap with other inborn errors of immunity (IEI), we test patients without a known family history of HA20 for a broad group of IEI using a molecular multigene panel, whole-exome sequencing, or whole-genome sequencing. This simultaneously assesses TNFAIP3 and >500 other genes known to cause IEI (28). By contrast, if patients have a known family history of HA20, we only test for TNFAIP3. A diagnosis of HA20 is made when a heterozygous pathogenic variant of TNFAIP3 or a heterozygous deletion of chromosome 6 containing the TNFAIP3 gene is identified. Approximately 5% of variants are identified using chromosomal microarray analysis or gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis, so these should be considered for patients with normal sequence analysis (29). Although a pathogenic variant in TNFAIP3 is required for a definitive diagnosis of HA20, negative genetic testing results should not limit treatment.

Most known pathogenic variants in TNFAIP3 are null (nonsense, frameshift, complete deletions, and splice null). These are classified as PVS1 by ACMG guidelines and should be considered diagnostic. By contrast, common missense variants (MAF >5%) are associated with increased autoimmune disease risk but should not be considered diagnostic of HA20. Rare (MAF <0.01%) pathogenic TNFAIP3 missense variants have been described but can be difficult to interpret without functional research assays (3). Accordingly, ∼80% of rare missense variants are designated variants of unknown significance (VUS). Interpretation of VUS should incorporate allele frequency, suspected impact on protein structure (based on in silico modeling, e.g., Revel and AlphaMissense), prior reports, functional assays, genotype–phenotype segregation within families, and other factors (30).

To better characterize VUS, we routinely perform familial variant testing and functional analysis at the bench. The “gold standard” assay requires overexpression of wild-type (WT) vs. mutant TNFAIP3 constructs in cell lines, followed by stimulation with TNF-α and measurement of NF-κB activation via luciferase activity, P65 phosphorylation and/or nuclear localization, IκBα degradation, or IKKα/β phosphorylation (1, 27, 31, 32). WT A20 and ACMG benign (BS3) variants suppress NF-κB activation, whereas null variants fail to do so. Other modalities include measurement of TNF-induced NF-κB activation or basal A20 levels in patient-derived cells (e.g., monocytes and dermal fibroblasts) or of mutant A20 protein stability in overexpression assays (1, 32, 33, 34). Because ACMG “pathogenic strong” (PS3) classification requires functional studies in isogenic systems (35), we test all coding variants in cell lines. However, overexpression assays have important limitations, including inability to evaluate noncoding or splice variants, overexpression artifact, missing regulatory mechanisms (e.g., splicing defects, posttranslational modification, and degradation), and absent cellular context in nonimmune cells. Additionally, A20 regulates pathways beyond TNF–NF-κB signaling, including inflammasome activation, interferon signaling, and cell death. For missense variants with inconclusive results in isogenic systems, we therefore measure basal A20 expression and TNF-induced NF-κB activation in primary patient cells; in some cases, we measure effects on other A20-regulated pathways. Nonetheless, results for some variants remain inconclusive even after extensive testing, and these assays are not broadly available to clinicians. Functional data for some TNFAIP3 variants can be found on the Infevers database (36), and ClinGen curations for TNFAIP3 are in development.

Once HA20 is diagnosed, we obtain a baseline panel of clinical laboratory testing and imaging studies to identify features of immune dysregulation, assess disease activity, and screen for HA20-related morbidities (Fig. 2 and Table 2). These include thyroiditis, hepatitis, ocular disease, SLE-like nephritis, central nervous system (CNS) vasculopathy or neuroinflammation, coronary vasculopathy, lymphoma, and IBD-like disease. When possible, we obtain disease activity biomarkers both during noninfectious flares and during intercritical periods, as these can differ substantially. Disease activity biomarkers should not be obtained during infection, as they may be nonspecifically elevated.

Baseline tests obtained in all patients include general laboratory assessments (e.g., complete blood counts with differential to screen for cytopenias, comprehensive metabolic panel, and urinalysis); and acute phase reactants (C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and complement [C3/C4] levels). If possible, we also obtain immunologic disease activity biomarkers to quantify the severity and nature of inflammation. Several disease activity markers (e.g., S100 proteins and interferon-stimulated gene [ISG] score) may not be widely available, especially in resource-limited settings. Patients in remission or with minimal disease activity may be able to forego these studies. However, we have observed patients with normal acute phase reactants who experience continued disease-related symptoms and even end-organ damage in the setting of elevated ISG score and/or S100 proteins. We therefore maintain a low threshold for ordering these more targeted assays; when they are not available at the time of assessment, we recommend banking patient-derived samples for future measurements.

In addition to immunologic biomarkers, we obtain subspecialist-level examinations for organ-threatening and life-threatening morbidities (e.g., slit lamp exam and tear film staining for ocular involvement). Fecal calprotectin and thyroid stimulating hormone are tested annually to assess for developing IBD or thyroid disease; in patients with abdominal symptoms, we obtain endoscopy/colonoscopy and/or abdominal imaging. More than 70% of HA20 patients develop autoantibodies, including patients with an autoimmunity-predominant phenotype who do not have appreciable acute phase reactant changes; we therefore test for autoantibodies (e.g., antinuclear antibody, antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens, rheumatoid factor, and cyclic citrullinated peptide) in all patients. We obtain radiographic studies for patients with significant arthritis and dedicated cardiac, pulmonary, and/or neurologic evaluations for patients with significant symptoms. Immune deficiencies are present in nearly 25% of patients in our cohort, and we therefore obtain quantitative immunoglobulin levels and T/B/natural killer (NK) subset levels at baseline.

We recommend that all patients maintain a close relationship with both their primary care physician and their rheumatologist as medical homes. Well-controlled patients see us and other relevant subspecialists for routine monitoring, including measurement of disease activity markers and screening for developing asymptomatic end-organ involvement (e.g., liver or kidney disease). Patients with ongoing active disease, whether clinical or subclinical, are seen and monitored more frequently. When monitoring patients, we maintain a high awareness for inflammatory, immunologic, and oncologic complications.

Although there are no Food and Drug Administration (FDA)–approved treatments or guidelines for HA20, empiric treatment can prevent morbidity and improve quality of life. Many conventional and biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) have been used in HA20, likely reflecting the disease’s substantial phenotypic and molecular heterogeneity (Table S1). The most used agents are corticosteroids, colchicine, TNF inhibitors, IL-1 inhibitors, and JAK inhibitors.

Some patients with autoinflammatory-predominant features (e.g., recurrent fevers, serositis, mucosal disease, and elevated acute phase reactants) and mild disease can achieve remission with colchicine monotherapy. Patients with mucosal disease may respond to PDE4 inhibitor, including apremilast, which is FDA-approved for BD. The cheaper generic PDE4 inhibitor roflumilast is not approved for BD but has shown efficacy in small studies (37, 38, 39). These can be combined with colchicine with relatively low risk and minimal laboratory monitoring. To minimize gastrointestinal adverse effects, both colchicine and PDE4 inhibitors should be initiated at a low dose and titrated slowly. Some reports suggest colchicine may be associated with lactose intolerance, so patients could consider limiting dairy or using lactase supplements (40).

For patients who fail these relatively well-tolerated, nonspecific therapies or have severe, organ-threatening disease, we use the clinical phenotype and biomarker profiles to guide selection of targeted therapies. For example, patients with elevated markers of inflammasome-related myeloid activation (IL-18, S100 proteins) or serum amyloid A are more likely to be treated with IL-1–targeted therapy as a first-line strategy. Conversely, we often treat patients with elevation of type 1 ISGs with JAK inhibitors (41). Once therapy is initiated, trending biomarkers can also help assess treatment response, with interpretation guided by clinical improvement. If biomarkers are broadly elevated, clinical features may remain central to therapeutic selection. Similarly, if biomarker assessments are not readily available (e.g., in consultations from outside centers and other countries), we base treatment decisions on clinical presentation, particularly the presence and extent of internal organ involvement.

In patients with autoinflammatory-predominant disease who fail colchicine or who have severe inflammation, we generally start with IL-1 inhibition due to the favorable adverse effect profile and favorable outcomes (22). The IL-1 receptor antagonist anakinra has a rapid onset and short half-life: patients can be started at 1–2 mg/kg daily and dose titrated up to 5–8 mg/kg/day as for other autoinflammatory conditions (42, 43). However, daily injections may be challenging, and site reactions can become severe at higher doses. With long-term use, concerns have also been raised about cutaneous or systemic amyloidosis (44, 45). We therefore often transition patients from anakinra to canakinumab as a long-term maintenance regimen with a lower injection burden. Nonetheless, some patients report superior responses to anakinra, particularly those with CNS disease and severe mucocutaneous disease (46). For severe mucocutaneous disease, we also maximize colchicine therapy and add a PDE4 inhibitor. Rilonacept can be a useful alternative to anakinra in this setting; however, due to competing mechanisms of action, rilonacept cannot be used in combination with anakinra (47). For patients with CNS involvement, combination therapy with anakinra (at lower doses) and canakinumab may be required.

Alternative strategies for autoinflammation-predominant disease include TNF inhibition and JAK inhibition (1, 3, 41). TNF inhibition is particularly useful for gastrointestinal and joint disease, and we have also successfully used TNF inhibitors in patients with large vessel vasculitis. We use JAK inhibitors in patients with persistently elevated ISGs, although transient ISG elevation is seen in 80% of our cohort (41). Similar to IL-1 inhibition, response is dose dependent and patients may require higher doses, similar to primary interferonopathies, to achieve clinical benefit (48). Anifrolumab, an interferon α receptor (IFNAR) inhibitor, is used in some primary interferonopathies as an alternative to JAK inhibition (49, 50, 51). We have used it sporadically in patients with HA20 who have a high type I interferon signature, with favorable results. While not a current first-line treatment in our practice, further work clarifying the role of IFNAR inhibition in primary interferonopathies may change this over time.

Nearly 50% of patients develop autoimmunity, often in combination with autoinflammation, though some develop an autoimmune-predominant phenotype (e.g., antibody-mediated cytopenias, SLE-like disease, and autoimmune hepatitis; Table 1) (22). In these patients, we initiate first-line treatments per evidence-based recommendations: seropositive rheumatoid arthritis with methotrexate, class V lupus nephritis with mycophenolate and a calcineurin inhibitor, and autoimmune hepatitis with azathioprine. Many patients do not respond to these standard therapies, and we frequently switch to or add biologic DMARDs for these cases. Patients with lupus-like disease and inflammatory liver disease are frequently treated with JAK inhibitors, as these features have been associated with ISG elevation and responsiveness to JAK inhibition in our cohort (41). TNF inhibition is another commonly used strategy.

When combination therapy is necessary, our most common approach is to add a conventional DMARD, which has been a safe and effective strategy for many rheumatic diseases (52). Colchicine and PDE4 inhibitors can be added for breakthrough mucosal disease, hydroxychloroquine or topical JAK inhibitors for breakthrough cutaneous disease, methotrexate for inflammatory peripheral arthritis, and azathioprine for breakthrough inflammatory liver disease. We also use azathioprine, calcineurin inhibitors, or sirolimus for refractory immune-mediated cytopenias and adjunctive azathioprine, calcineurin inhibitors, or mycophenolate for lupus-like nephritis. Thalidomide remains an option used at other centers and in other countries (21, 23, 53). Patients with humoral immunodeficiency and CVID-like disease are treated with immunoglobulin replacement therapy in combination with conventional or biologic DMARDs.

These strategies may be ineffective in patients with severe inflammatory disease (e.g., multi-organ damage or persistent inflammation refractory to single-agent therapy). In such cases, we have used combination biologics, a strategy that has also been reported for refractory IBD and other autoinflammatory diseases (54, 55, 56). For severe autoinflammation with IBD, we have combined TNF inhibitors with IL-1 inhibitors. For persistent autoinflammation with type 1 ISG elevation or elevation of type 1/2 cytokines, we have combined IL-1 inhibition with JAK inhibition or IFNAR blockade. In one severe and refractory case, we have referred a patient for allogeneic stem cell transplantation, who has been in drug-free remission for over 2 years after transplant.

Disease flares are generally treated with short courses of corticosteroids. Patients responsive to IL-1–targeted therapies can alternatively use short courses of anakinra as needed for flares. In patients with a history of postvaccination flares, a brief course of anakinra (or, less commonly, low-dose corticosteroids) prior to vaccination may help reduce flare risk. Anakinra and other IL-1 blockers do not affect vaccine responses, and this strategy is employed to prevent postvaccination flare in other patients with SAIDs (57, 58). Most patients do not experience postvaccination flares, and most such flares are mild; we therefore recommend against empiric anakinra or corticosteroids in patients without a prior history.

During disease flares triggered by infection or sepsis, we do not universally hold immunosuppression but rather assess the risks and benefits of holding vs. continuing immunomodulatory therapy. For example, anakinra can be continued safely even during septic shock if the underlying infection is also being treated; indeed, IL-1R inhibition has consistently demonstrated safety and even mortality benefit in sepsis patients with a hyperinflammatory phenotype (59, 60, 61). Moreover, withholding anakinra can trigger a profound rebound effect due to the drug’s short half-life, which can result in severe autoinflammation or even cytokine storm syndrome. Conversely, long-acting TNF inhibitors might be held briefly without substantial risk of harm. Similar considerations apply to surgical procedures, where the risks and benefits of withholding immunosuppression must be carefully balanced, accounting for the half-life and immunosuppressive potency of the specific therapy, the severity of the patient’s underlying disease, and the invasiveness of the procedure. As in other rheumatic diseases, the threshold for holding immunosuppression should be high in patients with organ-threatening or life-threatening disease (62). If immunosuppression must be withheld, patients should be monitored closely for the development of disease flares, including cytokine storm. Empiric high-dose IL-1R inhibition, pulse dose corticosteroids, and/or interferon-blocking therapies may be warranted in these situations.

Because HA20 is highly penetrant with autosomal-dominant inheritance, asymptomatic family members confirmed or suspected to have a variant should undergo a comprehensive rheumatologic and immunologic evaluation, with consideration of genetic testing. Children of affected individuals have a 50% chance of inheriting the variant, and genetic testing may be offered prior to symptom onset: newborns and younger children may be asymptomatic until late childhood but may nonetheless be at risk of developing severe disease. For family members with subclinical or clinical features, treatment should be strongly considered once molecular genetic testing confirms the diagnosis. Patients with asymptomatic or preclinical disease should be screened periodically, with a particular emphasis on mild yet clinically relevant disease manifestations and on lymphoma risk, especially in adults. All patients with known or suspected HA20 should be educated about both the classic features and the heterogeneous nature of the disease. Pregnancy and conception counseling should be provided to affected individuals of reproductive age.

HA20 is an underrecognized, highly heterogeneous PIRD with features of autoinflammation, autoimmunity, atopy, lymphoproliferation, and immunodeficiency. Clinicians should maintain a high suspicion for HA20 when evaluating patients with a personal and/or family history of early-onset BD, IBD, autoinflammation, and/or autoimmunity. HA20 should not be excluded simply because BD-like features are absent, as other phenotypes exist. Genetic testing for a pathogenic TNFAIP3 variant is diagnostic, and current methods capture ∼95% of loss-of-function variants. Clinical evaluations should be comprehensive, screening for common and rare morbidities affecting multiple organ systems, and management requires multispecialty collaboration. Treatment should be offered to all patients, including those with mild disease. Therapies targeting A20-suppressed inflammatory pathways should be prioritized: IL-1, TNF, and/or JAK inhibitors are the treatments of choice for severely affected patients. Inhibition and response are dose-dependent and can be guided by clinical symptoms and biomarkers; higher than normal doses may be required to achieve remission. Extreme caution should be used if holding treatment during acute infection or surgery due to the high risk of disease flare. Family members should be offered genetic testing, and patients with asymptomatic or subclinical disease should still undergo periodic screening.

Online supplemental material

Table S1 shows treatments reported in literature (non-exhaustive).

This work was funded in part by the Jeffrey Modell Foundation and Rheumatology Research Foundation.

Author contributions: Jonathan Li: visualization and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Jeffrey Zhou: writing—original draft, review, and editing. Manuel Carpio Tumba: data curation, visualization, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Tingyan He: data curation and formal analysis. Kader Cetin Gedik: conceptualization, investigation, methodology, resources, supervision, and writing—review and editing. Daniella M. Schwartz: conceptualization, supervision, and writing—review and editing.

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Author notes

Disclosures: D.M. Schwartz reported personal fees from Sobi and grants from Eli Lilly outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

This article is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International, as described at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Data & Figures

Figure 1.
An illustration explaining the genetics, pathophysiology, and clinical phenotypes of HA20. The illustration is divided into three sections: Genetics of HA20, Pathophysiology of HA20, and Phenotypes of HA20. The Genetics of HA20 section describes the etiology as heterozygous loss-of-function variants in TNFAIP3 on chromosome 6q23.3, with inheritance being autosomal dominant and possibly de novo. The Pathophysiology of HA20 section shows how A20 suppresses inflammatory signaling and how its loss leads to unchecked inflammation, involving TLR4, TNFR, and IFNAR pathways. The Phenotypes of HA20 section highlights the clinical heterogeneity of HA20 with a Venn diagram showing overlapping and diverse phenotypes including autoinflammation, immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, allergy, and lymphoproliferation.

HA20: Etiology, pathophysiology, and clinical phenotypes. Schematic presents a broad overview covering the genetic mechanism of HA20 (loss-of-function heterozygous variants in TNFAIP3), the immunology, and pathophysiology, including major pathways implicated in the immune dysregulation of HA20 and a selected list of HA20-associated phenotypes. PVS1, pathogenic very strong 1; TLR4, Toll-like receptor 4; TNFR, tumor necrosis factor receptor; NF-κB, nuclear factor κ-B; IFN, interferon; CVID, common variable immunodeficiency; ITP, immune thrombocytopenic purpura; AIHA, autoimmune hemolytic anemia; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; ALPS, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome.

Figure 1.
An illustration explaining the genetics, pathophysiology, and clinical phenotypes of HA20. The illustration is divided into three sections: Genetics of HA20, Pathophysiology of HA20, and Phenotypes of HA20. The Genetics of HA20 section describes the etiology as heterozygous loss-of-function variants in TNFAIP3 on chromosome 6q23.3, with inheritance being autosomal dominant and possibly de novo. The Pathophysiology of HA20 section shows how A20 suppresses inflammatory signaling and how its loss leads to unchecked inflammation, involving TLR4, TNFR, and IFNAR pathways. The Phenotypes of HA20 section highlights the clinical heterogeneity of HA20 with a Venn diagram showing overlapping and diverse phenotypes including autoinflammation, immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, allergy, and lymphoproliferation.

HA20: Etiology, pathophysiology, and clinical phenotypes. Schematic presents a broad overview covering the genetic mechanism of HA20 (loss-of-function heterozygous variants in TNFAIP3), the immunology, and pathophysiology, including major pathways implicated in the immune dysregulation of HA20 and a selected list of HA20-associated phenotypes. PVS1, pathogenic very strong 1; TLR4, Toll-like receptor 4; TNFR, tumor necrosis factor receptor; NF-κB, nuclear factor κ-B; IFN, interferon; CVID, common variable immunodeficiency; ITP, immune thrombocytopenic purpura; AIHA, autoimmune hemolytic anemia; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; ALPS, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome.

Close modal
Figure 2.
Flowchart outlining diagnostic and therapeutic approach for suspected HA20. The process begins with clinical suspicion based on symptoms such as early-onset Behcet-like disease, recurrent fevers, oral slash genital ulcers, refractory autoimmunity, IBD-like symptoms, unexplained cytopenias, multiple immunologic diagnoses, or a family history of autosomal dominant immune dysregulation. Genetic testing follows, with different paths for known and unknown family history, including options like multigene panel, WES, WGS, and targeted TNFAIP3 testing. If a TNFAIP3 variant is found, proceed to baseline assessment and initiate targeted therapy. Baseline assessment includes standard labs, autoantibodies, mandatory biomarkers, and immunology tests. Treatment strategy is guided by phenotype and biomarkers, with different approaches for mild slash mucocutaneous, autoinflammatory-predominant, GI slash joint slash vasculitis, and autoimmune-predominant conditions. Other considerations include biomarkers, flares, infections, and surgery, with specific recommendations for each.

Diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for HA20. Flowchart presents a proposed algorithm outlining our diagnostic and therapeutic approach for patients with suspected HA20. This includes symptoms prompting clinical suspicion (classical and atypical phenotypes), options for genetic and functional testing, baseline and serial clinical studies for assessment and monitoring, and other considerations. WES, whole-exome sequencing; WGS, whole-genome sequencing; CBC with diff, complete blood count with differential; CMP, complete/comprehensive metabolic panel; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; ANA, anti-nuclear antibody; ENA, extractable nuclear antigen antibody; RF, rheumatoid factor; CCP, cyclic citrullinated peptide; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP, C reactive protein; C3/C4, complement 3/complement 4; IL-, interleukin; SAA, serum amyloid A; CXCL9, CXC motif chemokine ligand 9; PDE4, phosphodiesterase 4; GI, gastrointestinal; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; JAK, Janus kinase; MTX, methotrexate; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil/mycophenolic acid; CNI, calcineurin inhibitor; AZA, azathioprine; PRN, pro re nata (as needed); IGRT, immunoglobulin replacement therapy.

Figure 2.
Flowchart outlining diagnostic and therapeutic approach for suspected HA20. The process begins with clinical suspicion based on symptoms such as early-onset Behcet-like disease, recurrent fevers, oral slash genital ulcers, refractory autoimmunity, IBD-like symptoms, unexplained cytopenias, multiple immunologic diagnoses, or a family history of autosomal dominant immune dysregulation. Genetic testing follows, with different paths for known and unknown family history, including options like multigene panel, WES, WGS, and targeted TNFAIP3 testing. If a TNFAIP3 variant is found, proceed to baseline assessment and initiate targeted therapy. Baseline assessment includes standard labs, autoantibodies, mandatory biomarkers, and immunology tests. Treatment strategy is guided by phenotype and biomarkers, with different approaches for mild slash mucocutaneous, autoinflammatory-predominant, GI slash joint slash vasculitis, and autoimmune-predominant conditions. Other considerations include biomarkers, flares, infections, and surgery, with specific recommendations for each.

Diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for HA20. Flowchart presents a proposed algorithm outlining our diagnostic and therapeutic approach for patients with suspected HA20. This includes symptoms prompting clinical suspicion (classical and atypical phenotypes), options for genetic and functional testing, baseline and serial clinical studies for assessment and monitoring, and other considerations. WES, whole-exome sequencing; WGS, whole-genome sequencing; CBC with diff, complete blood count with differential; CMP, complete/comprehensive metabolic panel; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; ANA, anti-nuclear antibody; ENA, extractable nuclear antigen antibody; RF, rheumatoid factor; CCP, cyclic citrullinated peptide; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP, C reactive protein; C3/C4, complement 3/complement 4; IL-, interleukin; SAA, serum amyloid A; CXCL9, CXC motif chemokine ligand 9; PDE4, phosphodiesterase 4; GI, gastrointestinal; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; JAK, Janus kinase; MTX, methotrexate; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil/mycophenolic acid; CNI, calcineurin inhibitor; AZA, azathioprine; PRN, pro re nata (as needed); IGRT, immunoglobulin replacement therapy.

Close modal
Table 1.

Major reported clinical phenotypes of HA20

Karri et al. 2024 (3)Elhani et al. 2024 (4)Shiraki et al. 2025 (21)Others (21, 23, 24, 25, 26); Multicenter cohort (27)
Demographics ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 
# of patients 199 177 54 12 185 
# of families 130 NR 37 11 112 
Population East Asia, Turkey, Europe, and United States East Asia, Turkey, Europe, and United States Japan and Vietnam East Asia and Europe United States, Asia, Europe, South and Central America, and New Zealand 
Age of onset, years Mean 7 (0–39) Median 4 (0–35) Median 2.8 (0–27),
60% before age 5 
Mean 4.8 (0–26)
N = 10 
Median 3.3 (0.04–33) 
Female NR 62% 54% 58.3% 55.2% 
Autoinflammation ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 
Oral ulcers 68% 69% 78% 75% 72.2% 
Genital ulcers 37% 36% 35% 42% 32% 
Rash 42% 43% 50% 42% 43.8% 
Arthritis/arthralgia 34% 31% 37% 50% 46.7% 
Ocular 8.5% 8% 11% 17% 6% 
Gastrointestinal, IBD-like 39% 46% 76% 58% 58.6% (27.7% with intestinal ulcers) 
Vascular disease 11% 8% 4% 17% NR 
Neurologic disease 11.5% 10% 18.5% 8% 16.6% 
Pathergy 1.5% NR NR NR NR 
Recurrent fever 49% 54% 85% 58% 63.3% 
Lung disease 6% 6% NR 20.2% 
HLH/cytokine storm NR NR NR 
Autoimmunity ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 
Autoantibodies 72% NR NR (all autoimmunity 28%) 83% ANA 37.2%, antithyroid antibodies 15.9%, Coombs 25%, and other autoantibodies 35.9% 
Thyroid 14% 14% 17% 17% 17.6% 
T1DM 4% 3% 2% 17% 
Liver disease 14.5% 10% 15% 17% 28.9% 
SLE 7% 9% 6% NR 
Cytopenias 20% 6% 7% 42% 56.6% 
Lymphoproliferation 
ALPS-like 1% NR NR NR NR 
Lymphoma 1% NR 2% NR 
Lymphadenopathy 16% NR 15% NR 32% 
Immunodeficiency 
CVID 1.5% All immunodeficiency 5% NR NR 
Humoral deficiency 5.5% NR 8% 
Recurrent infection 9% NR NR 35.5% 
Karri et al. 2024 (3)Elhani et al. 2024 (4)Shiraki et al. 2025 (21)Others (21, 23, 24, 25, 26); Multicenter cohort (27)
Demographics ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 
# of patients 199 177 54 12 185 
# of families 130 NR 37 11 112 
Population East Asia, Turkey, Europe, and United States East Asia, Turkey, Europe, and United States Japan and Vietnam East Asia and Europe United States, Asia, Europe, South and Central America, and New Zealand 
Age of onset, years Mean 7 (0–39) Median 4 (0–35) Median 2.8 (0–27),
60% before age 5 
Mean 4.8 (0–26)
N = 10 
Median 3.3 (0.04–33) 
Female NR 62% 54% 58.3% 55.2% 
Autoinflammation ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 
Oral ulcers 68% 69% 78% 75% 72.2% 
Genital ulcers 37% 36% 35% 42% 32% 
Rash 42% 43% 50% 42% 43.8% 
Arthritis/arthralgia 34% 31% 37% 50% 46.7% 
Ocular 8.5% 8% 11% 17% 6% 
Gastrointestinal, IBD-like 39% 46% 76% 58% 58.6% (27.7% with intestinal ulcers) 
Vascular disease 11% 8% 4% 17% NR 
Neurologic disease 11.5% 10% 18.5% 8% 16.6% 
Pathergy 1.5% NR NR NR NR 
Recurrent fever 49% 54% 85% 58% 63.3% 
Lung disease 6% 6% NR 20.2% 
HLH/cytokine storm NR NR NR 
Autoimmunity ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 
Autoantibodies 72% NR NR (all autoimmunity 28%) 83% ANA 37.2%, antithyroid antibodies 15.9%, Coombs 25%, and other autoantibodies 35.9% 
Thyroid 14% 14% 17% 17% 17.6% 
T1DM 4% 3% 2% 17% 
Liver disease 14.5% 10% 15% 17% 28.9% 
SLE 7% 9% 6% NR 
Cytopenias 20% 6% 7% 42% 56.6% 
Lymphoproliferation 
ALPS-like 1% NR NR NR NR 
Lymphoma 1% NR 2% NR 
Lymphadenopathy 16% NR 15% NR 32% 
Immunodeficiency 
CVID 1.5% All immunodeficiency 5% NR NR 
Humoral deficiency 5.5% NR 8% 
Recurrent infection 9% NR NR 35.5% 

NR, not reported; HLH, hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; ALPS, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome; CVID, common variable immunodeficiency; +, reported but frequency not known.

Table 2.

Baseline and annual evaluations

SystemBaselineRoutine monitoringSituational
Rheumatologic Autoantibodes (ANA, Sm, RNP, SSA, SSB, APL Abs ANCA, RF, and CCP)
Mandatory disease activity markersa: ESR, CRP, C3/C4
Facultative disease activity markersa: S100A8/9, S100A12, SAA. CXCL9, IL-18, sIL2R, IFN signature (nanostring, four-gene panel, monocyte CD169/CD274) 
At least annually:
Mandatory disease activity markersa: ESR, CRP, and C3/C4
Facultative disease activity markersa: S100A8/9, S100A12, SAA, IL18, CXCL9, sIL2R, and IFN signature (nanostring, four-gene panel, monocyte CD169/CD274) 
Plasma cytokines
Imaging of affected joints
CK, aldolase
Additional autoantibodies (myositis, scleroderma related) 
Dermatologic Skin exam and symptom screen by primary provider At least annually: Skin exam, symptom screen Skin biopsy 
Dental/oral health Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen Salivary flow measurement
Salivary gland imaging
MSG biopsy
Dental evaluation (unusual caries) 
Neurologic Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen CNS: Brain MRI, MRA, MRV, and LP
PNS: EMG ± biopsy, comprehensive neuropsychiatric testing 
Ophthalmologic Comprehensive eye exam, slit lamp, retinal, tear film staining At least annually: Comprehensive eye exam Uveitis, scleritis, episcleritis, vasculitis, and dry eye disease 
Cardiac Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen Myocarditis: Cardiac MRI, cardiac PET, cardiac catheterization, cardiac enzymes, lipids, TTE, and EKG 
Pulmonary Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen PFTs, CXR, HRCT chest, bronchoscopy, and VATS 
Gastrointestinal (In addition to general tests)
Hepatic panel, fecal calprotectin
Fib4 score 
At least annually: Hepatic panel, Fib4 score
As needed: Calprotectin 
Micronutrient levels
EGD
Enteroscopy
Colonoscopy
Abdominal imaging (CT and US)
Autoimmune hepatitis serologies
Celiac screen 
Renal (In addition to general tests) BMP (serum electrolytes, BUN, and Cr)
UA and UPCR 
At least annually: UA, UPCR, and BMP If concern for CKD: Renal US and kidney biopsy 
Endocrine Growth curves, TSH, free T4
Antithyroid Abs
A1C 
At least annually: Growth curves (for children), TSH, free T4
Situational: A1c, fasting glucose, and antithyroid Abs 
DEXA scan
T1DM-related autoantibodies 
Hematologic and oncologic CBC with differential, PT/PTT,
iron, and B12
APL Abs, cancer screening 
At least annually: CBC with diff, cancer screening (age appropriate)
As needed: PT/PTT,
Iron, B12
APL Abs 
Anti-IF antibodies
Anti-PLT antibodies
DAT, Coombs
SPEP, UPEP, IEP, and K/L FLC
Bone marrow biopsy, PET-CT 
Allergic and immunologic Quantitative immunoglobulins
T/B/NK subsets
Vaccine titers
Annual vaccinations 
At least annually: Quantitative immunoglobulins, T/B/NK subsets
Annual vaccinations
As needed: Vaccine titers 
IgG subsets
B cell subsets
T cell subsets
Anti-cytokine antibodies 
SystemBaselineRoutine monitoringSituational
Rheumatologic Autoantibodes (ANA, Sm, RNP, SSA, SSB, APL Abs ANCA, RF, and CCP)
Mandatory disease activity markersa: ESR, CRP, C3/C4
Facultative disease activity markersa: S100A8/9, S100A12, SAA. CXCL9, IL-18, sIL2R, IFN signature (nanostring, four-gene panel, monocyte CD169/CD274) 
At least annually:
Mandatory disease activity markersa: ESR, CRP, and C3/C4
Facultative disease activity markersa: S100A8/9, S100A12, SAA, IL18, CXCL9, sIL2R, and IFN signature (nanostring, four-gene panel, monocyte CD169/CD274) 
Plasma cytokines
Imaging of affected joints
CK, aldolase
Additional autoantibodies (myositis, scleroderma related) 
Dermatologic Skin exam and symptom screen by primary provider At least annually: Skin exam, symptom screen Skin biopsy 
Dental/oral health Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen Salivary flow measurement
Salivary gland imaging
MSG biopsy
Dental evaluation (unusual caries) 
Neurologic Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen CNS: Brain MRI, MRA, MRV, and LP
PNS: EMG ± biopsy, comprehensive neuropsychiatric testing 
Ophthalmologic Comprehensive eye exam, slit lamp, retinal, tear film staining At least annually: Comprehensive eye exam Uveitis, scleritis, episcleritis, vasculitis, and dry eye disease 
Cardiac Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen Myocarditis: Cardiac MRI, cardiac PET, cardiac catheterization, cardiac enzymes, lipids, TTE, and EKG 
Pulmonary Symptom screen At least annually: Symptom screen PFTs, CXR, HRCT chest, bronchoscopy, and VATS 
Gastrointestinal (In addition to general tests)
Hepatic panel, fecal calprotectin
Fib4 score 
At least annually: Hepatic panel, Fib4 score
As needed: Calprotectin 
Micronutrient levels
EGD
Enteroscopy
Colonoscopy
Abdominal imaging (CT and US)
Autoimmune hepatitis serologies
Celiac screen 
Renal (In addition to general tests) BMP (serum electrolytes, BUN, and Cr)
UA and UPCR 
At least annually: UA, UPCR, and BMP If concern for CKD: Renal US and kidney biopsy 
Endocrine Growth curves, TSH, free T4
Antithyroid Abs
A1C 
At least annually: Growth curves (for children), TSH, free T4
Situational: A1c, fasting glucose, and antithyroid Abs 
DEXA scan
T1DM-related autoantibodies 
Hematologic and oncologic CBC with differential, PT/PTT,
iron, and B12
APL Abs, cancer screening 
At least annually: CBC with diff, cancer screening (age appropriate)
As needed: PT/PTT,
Iron, B12
APL Abs 
Anti-IF antibodies
Anti-PLT antibodies
DAT, Coombs
SPEP, UPEP, IEP, and K/L FLC
Bone marrow biopsy, PET-CT 
Allergic and immunologic Quantitative immunoglobulins
T/B/NK subsets
Vaccine titers
Annual vaccinations 
At least annually: Quantitative immunoglobulins, T/B/NK subsets
Annual vaccinations
As needed: Vaccine titers 
IgG subsets
B cell subsets
T cell subsets
Anti-cytokine antibodies 

ANA, antinuclear antibody; Sm, Smith; RNP, ribonucleoprotein; APL, antiphospholipid; ANCA, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody; RF, rheumatoid factor; CCP, cyclic citrullinated peptide; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP, C-reactive protein; SAA, serum amyloid A; IL, interleukin; sIL2R, soluble IL-2 receptor; IFN, interferon; CK, creatine kinase; MSG, minor salivary gland; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MRA, magnetic resonance angiography; MRV, magnetic resonance venography; LP, lumbar puncture; EMG, electromyography; PET, positron emission tomography; TTE, transthoracic echocardiogram; EKG, electrocardiogram; PFT, pulmonary function test; CXR, chest x-ray; HRCT, high resolution computed tomography; VATS, video assisted thoracoscopic surgery; EGD, esophagogastroduodenoscopy; US, ultrasound; BMP, basic metabolic panel; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; Cr, creatinine; UA, urinalysis; UPCR, urine protein:creatinine ratio; CKD, chronic kidney disease; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; DEXA, dual energy x-ray absorptiometry; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; CBC, complete blood count; PT, prothrombin time; PTT, partial thromboplastin time; IF, intrinsic factor; PLT, platelet; DAT, direct antigen test; SPEP, serum protein electrophoresis; UPEP, urine protein electrophoresis; IEP, immunoelectrophoresis; K/L FLC, κ/λ-free light chain; IgG, immunoglobulin G.

a

Mandatory vs. facultative disease activity markers: We recommend checking broadly available disease activity markers (labeled “mandatory”) for all patients with HA20. Other disease activity markers (labeled “facultative”) may be available only at selected diagnostic immunology labs. However, we have seen patients with active organ-threatening disease (i.e., liver disease and neuroinflammation) who have normal standard disease activity markers but elevated facultative disease activity markers. We therefore check both mandatory and facultative markers annually in all patients.

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