Leniolisib, a selective phosphoinositide 3-kinase δ (PI3Kδ) inhibitor, is approved in several countries for the treatment of activated PI3Kδ syndrome (APDS) in patients 12 years of age and older. We report the first successful compassionate use of leniolisib in another inborn error of immunity, protein kinase C δ deficiency. In addition to infectious complications, the 14-year-old patient experienced lymphoproliferation in the form of splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and thymic hyperplasia; trilineage cytopenia; multiple forms of autoimmunity; and interstitial lung disease. Decision to initiate treatment with leniolisib was based on multiorgan-disease progression, lack of therapeutic alternatives, molecular evidence, overlap with APDS manifestations, and mammalian target of rapamycin hyperactivity. We observed improvement in lymphoproliferation, cytopenias, hepatic cytolysis, skin manifestations, pulmonary function, favorable changes in immunophenotypes, and no known drug-related adverse events. This experience supports expanding Leniolisib’s potential indications to appropriately selected patients and conditions. Broader repurposing strategies for targeted therapies in diseases involving dysregulated PI3K signaling should be systematically evaluated in clinical trials.
Introduction
Protein kinase C δ (PKCδ) deficiency is an inborn error of immunity (IEI) caused by autosomal recessive variants in PRKCD that result in PKCδ loss-of-function (1, 2, 3). PKCδ is a ubiquitously expressed serine-threonine kinase involved in cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. Once activated, PKCδ is modulated by phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) (4).
Although the interaction between PKCδ and PI3K remains incompletely defined, PKCδ may inhibit spleen tyrosine kinase, influencing downstream PI3K-dependent signals in B lymphocytes (4, 5) (Fig. 1 A). Furthermore, previous studies have shown that pharmacological inhibition of PRKC activity leads to AKT hyperphosphorylation, suggesting that the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway is negatively regulated by PKC (6). PKCδ also impacts the function of other immune cells (4). Knockout (Prkcd−/−) mice have disrupted immune homeostasis, resulting in autoimmunity, lymphoproliferation, and B cell infiltration (3, 7, 8).
Panel A: A molecular diagram illustrates how P K C may inhibit spleen tyrosine kinase, influencing downstream P I 3 K-dependent signals in B lymphocytes. Panel B: A clinical comparison highlights various clinical features such as lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and immune cell subsets. Panel C: Representative flow cytometry assays from a healthy donor, Patient 1, and Patient 2 are shown. The assays include cells pretreated with C A L 101 to inhibit P I 3 K signaling or rapamycin to inhibit m T O R signaling. Panel D: Summarized data showing patients with A P D S display increased p S 6 upon in vitro stimulation compared with healthy donors.
Rationale for leniolisib treatment. (A) Potential interactions of PKCδ and PI3K pathways. (B) Clinical comparison of APDS and PRKCD deficiency. (C) Representative pS6 flow cytometry assay of stimulated and nonstimulated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from an HD (top), patient 1 (index case described in the report), and patient 2 (his affected sibling). Stimulated cells were also pretreated with CAL101 (idelalisib, black dashed line) to inhibit PI3Kδ signaling or rapamycin (grey dashed line) to inhibit mTOR signaling. (D) Summarized data showing CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from the index patient and patients with APDS display increased pS6 upon in vitro stimulation compared with HDs. BCR, B cell receptor; Comp-FITC-A, compensation control fluorescein isothiocyanate; DAG, diacylglycerol; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; HD, healthy donor; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; PLCγ, phospholipase C γ; PRKCD; protein kinase C δ gene; Pt, patient; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; stim; stimulated; Syk; spleen tyrosine kinase.
Panel A: A molecular diagram illustrates how P K C may inhibit spleen tyrosine kinase, influencing downstream P I 3 K-dependent signals in B lymphocytes. Panel B: A clinical comparison highlights various clinical features such as lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and immune cell subsets. Panel C: Representative flow cytometry assays from a healthy donor, Patient 1, and Patient 2 are shown. The assays include cells pretreated with C A L 101 to inhibit P I 3 K signaling or rapamycin to inhibit m T O R signaling. Panel D: Summarized data showing patients with A P D S display increased p S 6 upon in vitro stimulation compared with healthy donors.
Rationale for leniolisib treatment. (A) Potential interactions of PKCδ and PI3K pathways. (B) Clinical comparison of APDS and PRKCD deficiency. (C) Representative pS6 flow cytometry assay of stimulated and nonstimulated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from an HD (top), patient 1 (index case described in the report), and patient 2 (his affected sibling). Stimulated cells were also pretreated with CAL101 (idelalisib, black dashed line) to inhibit PI3Kδ signaling or rapamycin (grey dashed line) to inhibit mTOR signaling. (D) Summarized data showing CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from the index patient and patients with APDS display increased pS6 upon in vitro stimulation compared with HDs. BCR, B cell receptor; Comp-FITC-A, compensation control fluorescein isothiocyanate; DAG, diacylglycerol; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; HD, healthy donor; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; PLCγ, phospholipase C γ; PRKCD; protein kinase C δ gene; Pt, patient; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; stim; stimulated; Syk; spleen tyrosine kinase.
Since 2013, PKCδ deficiency has been reported in 21 patients (Table 1, 3, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17), revealing a diverse clinical phenotype paralleling the murine model. Patients most commonly present with early-onset and often severe autoimmunity, particularly lupus-like disease with multiorgan involvement, including immune-mediated cytopenias, nephritis, and systemic inflammation. Lymphoproliferative features such as persistent lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly are frequently observed. Recurrent and sometimes severe infections are also reported, involving both common bacterial pathogens and opportunistic organisms. Most cases present with a combination of autoimmunity, lymphoproliferation, and susceptibility to infections, while some exhibit a singular phenotype. Manifestations overlap with other disorders, including autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome, monogenic systemic lupus erythematosus, common variable immunodeficiency, and chronic granulomatous disease (3). Accordingly, therapeutic strategies vary (Table 1) and mainly include immunomodulatory agents such as mTOR inhibitor rapamycin. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) was performed in two cases (9).
PKCδ deficiency reported in the literature
| Reference . | Age at onset . | Sex . | Ethnicity . | Genetic variant . | Initial presentation . | Infections . | Lymphoproliferation . | Autoimmunity . | Laboratory . | Treatment(s) . | Age at last follow-up . | Alive/dead . |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salzer et al., 2013, PT1 (2) | Infancy | M | Turkish | c.1352+1G>A | Recurrent infections | URTI (i.e., pneumonia), LRTI, UTIs, gastroenteritis otitis media, and herpes virus viremia | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | Nephrotic syndrome, nonspecific reactive follicular hyperplasia, relapsing polychondritis, hypothyroidism, antiphospholipid syndrome, and SLE | Progressive reduction in B cells, reduced memory B cells, increased CD21low B cells, low IgG levels, and elevated IgA and IgM levels | Steroids, rituximab, MMF, IVIG, enalapril, anticoagulants, and thyroid hormone replacement | 12 years | Alive |
| Belot et al., 2013, PTV1, V3, V4 (10) | 10 years | F | White, of Northern European extraction | c.1528G>A | Discoid lupus rash and arthritis | None reported | Hepatomegaly | Alopecia, lupus nephritis, arthritis, chronic cutaneous lupus, WHO type 2 glomerulonephritis with severe nephrotic syndrome, chronic renal failure, SLE, and CNS vasculitis | Lymphopenia (B and T cells), positive ANAs (1:640) and anti-dsDNA antibodies, low C3 and C4, and elevated IgA | Steroids, hydroxychloroquine, Azathioprine, methotrexate, and MMF | 24 years | Alive |
| 3 years | F | White, of Northern European extraction | c.1528G>A | Diffuse lymphoproliferation and AIHA | P. aeruginosa septic shock | Lymphadenopathy, multiple compressive adenopathy with mediastinal involvement and hepatosplenomegaly | SLE, AIHA, serositis, pancreatitis, ITP, lupus rash, and lupus nephritis | Lymphopenia, but increased CD3+ T cells, undetectable double-negative TCRα/β T cells, positive ANAs (1:640) and anti-dsDNA antibodies, and low C3 and C4 | Immunosuppressive treatments | 8 years | Died at age 13 years (end-stage kidney failure complicated by Pseudomonas sustained septic shock) | |
| 6 years | M | White, of Northern European extraction | c.1528G>A | Lupus nephritis | | None | Renal flare with malar rash and arthritis SLE | Increased immature and naive B cells, reduced memory B cells, positive ANAs, and anti-dsDNA antibodies | Steroids (prednisolone) and MMF | 13 years | Alive | |
| Kuehn et al., 2013, PT1 (1) | 3 years | M | Hispanic | c.1840C>T | Recurrent otitis, sinusitis, persistent lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and intermittent fevers | Recurrent otitis media/sinusitis, and persistent EBV | Hepatosplenomegaly and mediastinal lymphadenitis (with superior vena cava syndrome) | SLE and AIHA | CD5+ majority B lymphocytosis; reduced class-switched memory B cells; elevated DNT αβ and DNT γδ; low levels of NK cells and NK cell cytolytic activity; increased ESR, CRP, ALT, and AST; hypergammaglobulinemia; positive ANAs; anti-RNP; anti-Smith; anti-SSA | Steroids (prednisone) and sirolimus | 7 years | Alive |
| Kiykim et al., 2015, PT6 (11) | Infancy | M | Turkish | c.742G>A | Recurrent fever | Pneumonia, gastroenteritis, and CMV | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | SLE | Naive majority B lymphocytosis and CD21low, reduced levels of switched memory B cells, increased IgM, and reduced NK functionality | Ganciclovir, IVIG, topical steroids, hydroxychloroquine, IVIG, and prophylactic antibiotics | 3.5 years | Alive |
| Lei et al., 2018, PT II-1, PT II-2, and PT 11-3 (12) | 1 year | F | Endogamous Pakistani | c.1294G>T | Constitutional symptoms (intermittent fever, night sweats, fatigue), severe thrombocytopenia, photosensitive and petechial rash, scarring alopecia, and hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | SLE (acuta cutaneous lupus, oral/nasal ulcers) | AIHA, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, positive ANA (1:1,280), anti-dsDNA, antiphospholipid antibody, low complement, elevated CRP and ESR, elevated IgG, and low levels of C4 | Steroid, rituximab (discontinued for adverse reaction), IVIG, hydroxychloroquine, Azathioprine, and Ofatumumab | NR | Alive |
| 1 year | F | Endogamous Pakistani | c.1294G>T | Constitutional symptoms (intermittent fever, night sweats, fatigue), severe thrombocytopenia, photosensitive and petechial rash, scarring alopecia, hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy | SLE (acute cutaneous lupus, serositis, and renal impairment) | AIHA, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, slight neutropenia, positive ANA (1:1,280), anti-dsDNA, antiphospholipid antibody, and low complement, elevated CRP and ESR, elevated albumin/creatinine ratio, hypergammaglobulinemia, and low levels of C4 | Steroid, IVIG, rituximab (discontinued for adverse reaction),h ydroxychloroquine, Azathioprine, and Ofatumumab | NR | Alive | |
| 26 mo | M | Endogamous Pakistani | c.1294G>T | Constitutional symptoms (intermittent fever, night sweats, fatigue), severe thrombocytopenia, photosensitive and petechial rash, scarring alopecia, and hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Hepatosplenomegaly | SLE (acute cutaneous lupus) | AIHA, thrombocytopenia, positive ANA (1:1,280), anti-dsDNA, anti-Smith antibody, and low complement | Steroid (IV methylprednisolone), IVIG, and rituximab | NR | Alive | |
| Sharifinejad et al., 2020, PT10 (13) | Infancy | M | Afghan | c.1293_1294insA | Recurrent oral candidiasis, nonsevere upper respiratory and gastrointestinal tract infections, and food allergy | Pneumonia, oral candidiasis, and recurrent gastroenteritis | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | SLE | Increased DNT, reduced NK number, increased IgG, and nonprotective antidiphtheria | Corticosteroids, antibiotic prophylaxis | 13 years | Alive |
| Neehus et al., 2021, PT13-17 (14) | 1 year | F | Turkish | c.571+2dup | BCGosis, fever, left axillary, retroauricular, and cervical lymphadenopathies | BCGosis, Salmonella bacteremia, Staphylococcus aureus lymphadenitis, and recurrent gingivitis | Lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly | SLE | Elevated naive B cells and reduced B memory, with elevated CD21low and transitional cells, hypogammaglobulinemia, ANA+, and anti-dsDNA+ | Steroids IVIG Antimycobacterial (ceftriaxone); antibiotic prophylaxis (amoxicillin) | 14 years | Alive |
| 7 mo | M | Turkish | c.1384C>T | Fever, diarrhea, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, left axillary lymphadenopathy with purulent discharge, and BCGitis | BCGitis, recurrent gastroenteritis | Hepatosplenomegaly | AIHA | Impaired DHR test and ANA+ | Steroids Isoniazid Rifampicin | 10 years | Alive | |
| 7 mo | M | Turkish | c.1384C>T | BCGitis | BCGitis, recurrent gastroenteritis and shingles | Lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly | AIHA | Impaired DHR test and ANA+ | Steroids Isoniazid Rifampicin IVIG | 7 years | Alive | |
| 1 year | F | Irani | c.642del | BCGitis | BCGitis | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | None | Impaired DHR test and nonprotective antibody responses to tetanus and diphtheria | Isoniazid Rifampicin Azithromycin | 3 years | Alive | |
| NR | M | Irani | c.642del | Asymptomatic | None | None | None | Impaired DHR test | No treatment | 6 years | Alive | |
| Gu et al., 2021, PT16-17 (15) and Jefferson et al., 2023 (3) | 6 y | M | Chinese | c.36T>G | Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and recurrent infections | NR | Splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | Pancytopenia | Positive antibodies for EBV, CMV, herpes simplex virus, and rubella viruses, increased TCRαβ DNT, increased CD8+ T cells and IgG, and low levels of NK cells | Steroids, IRT, and sirolimus | 10 years | Alive |
| NR | F | Chinese | c.36T>G | Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and anemia | NR | Splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | Anemia | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Yang et al., 2022, PT18 (18) | 5 mo | F | Chinese | c.661C>T | Recurrent fever, respiratory tract infections, and lymphadenopathy | URTIs and BCGosis | Multiple lymphadenopathy (abdominal mesenteric lymph nodes invading the abdominal wall), bone marrow hyperplasia, and hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Increased DNT, elevated CD8+ T cells, low levels of CD4+ T cells, and CRP positive | Isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, sirolimus, IFN-γ, and antibiotics | 8 years | Alive |
| Neehus et al., 2022, PT19 (19) | 2 years | F | American | c.285C>A/c.376C>T | URTI, lymphadenitis | Burkholderia cepacia and Mycobacterium lentiflavum lymphadenopathy | Infectious lymphadenopathy | None | Low levels of CD4+ T cells, decreased relative proportions of CD27+IgD+ and CD27+IgD− memory B cells, and abnormally low DHR test | Cotrimoxazole, isoniazid, and Rifampicin | 5 years | Alive |
| Roderick et al., 2023, PT20-21 (9) | 9 mo | M | British | c.788-2A>G/c.571C>T | Listeria meningitis | Listeria meningitis, Enterococcus faecium bacteremia, varicella and shingles, invasive Candida infection, recurrent episodes of Achromobacter xylosoxidans cervical lymphadenitis, and early-onset enterocolitis | Lymphoid hyperplasia and splenomegaly | SLE, AIHA, and ITP | Increased DNTs, low B cells with low IgG with high IgM, positive anticardiolipin antibodies, Coombs positive, and positive thyroid peroxidase antibodies | Steroids, IVIG, rituximab, Sirolimus, Hydroxychloroquine, HSCT, and cyclosporine (for GVHD prophylaxis) | NR | Alive |
| 20 mo | F | British | c.788-2A>G/c.571C>T | Sepsis due to nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae | Early-onset enterocolitis | Lymphoid hyperplasia, splenomegaly | SLE | Increased DNTs, low B cells with low IgG and high IgM, positive anticardiolipin antibodies, and GAD antibody-positive | IVIG replacement therapy, rituximab, sirolimus (stopped because of oral ulceration), MMF, and hydroxychloroquine HSCT | 8.5 years | Alive |
| Reference . | Age at onset . | Sex . | Ethnicity . | Genetic variant . | Initial presentation . | Infections . | Lymphoproliferation . | Autoimmunity . | Laboratory . | Treatment(s) . | Age at last follow-up . | Alive/dead . |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salzer et al., 2013, PT1 (2) | Infancy | M | Turkish | c.1352+1G>A | Recurrent infections | URTI (i.e., pneumonia), LRTI, UTIs, gastroenteritis otitis media, and herpes virus viremia | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | Nephrotic syndrome, nonspecific reactive follicular hyperplasia, relapsing polychondritis, hypothyroidism, antiphospholipid syndrome, and SLE | Progressive reduction in B cells, reduced memory B cells, increased CD21low B cells, low IgG levels, and elevated IgA and IgM levels | Steroids, rituximab, MMF, IVIG, enalapril, anticoagulants, and thyroid hormone replacement | 12 years | Alive |
| Belot et al., 2013, PTV1, V3, V4 (10) | 10 years | F | White, of Northern European extraction | c.1528G>A | Discoid lupus rash and arthritis | None reported | Hepatomegaly | Alopecia, lupus nephritis, arthritis, chronic cutaneous lupus, WHO type 2 glomerulonephritis with severe nephrotic syndrome, chronic renal failure, SLE, and CNS vasculitis | Lymphopenia (B and T cells), positive ANAs (1:640) and anti-dsDNA antibodies, low C3 and C4, and elevated IgA | Steroids, hydroxychloroquine, Azathioprine, methotrexate, and MMF | 24 years | Alive |
| 3 years | F | White, of Northern European extraction | c.1528G>A | Diffuse lymphoproliferation and AIHA | P. aeruginosa septic shock | Lymphadenopathy, multiple compressive adenopathy with mediastinal involvement and hepatosplenomegaly | SLE, AIHA, serositis, pancreatitis, ITP, lupus rash, and lupus nephritis | Lymphopenia, but increased CD3+ T cells, undetectable double-negative TCRα/β T cells, positive ANAs (1:640) and anti-dsDNA antibodies, and low C3 and C4 | Immunosuppressive treatments | 8 years | Died at age 13 years (end-stage kidney failure complicated by Pseudomonas sustained septic shock) | |
| 6 years | M | White, of Northern European extraction | c.1528G>A | Lupus nephritis | | None | Renal flare with malar rash and arthritis SLE | Increased immature and naive B cells, reduced memory B cells, positive ANAs, and anti-dsDNA antibodies | Steroids (prednisolone) and MMF | 13 years | Alive | |
| Kuehn et al., 2013, PT1 (1) | 3 years | M | Hispanic | c.1840C>T | Recurrent otitis, sinusitis, persistent lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and intermittent fevers | Recurrent otitis media/sinusitis, and persistent EBV | Hepatosplenomegaly and mediastinal lymphadenitis (with superior vena cava syndrome) | SLE and AIHA | CD5+ majority B lymphocytosis; reduced class-switched memory B cells; elevated DNT αβ and DNT γδ; low levels of NK cells and NK cell cytolytic activity; increased ESR, CRP, ALT, and AST; hypergammaglobulinemia; positive ANAs; anti-RNP; anti-Smith; anti-SSA | Steroids (prednisone) and sirolimus | 7 years | Alive |
| Kiykim et al., 2015, PT6 (11) | Infancy | M | Turkish | c.742G>A | Recurrent fever | Pneumonia, gastroenteritis, and CMV | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | SLE | Naive majority B lymphocytosis and CD21low, reduced levels of switched memory B cells, increased IgM, and reduced NK functionality | Ganciclovir, IVIG, topical steroids, hydroxychloroquine, IVIG, and prophylactic antibiotics | 3.5 years | Alive |
| Lei et al., 2018, PT II-1, PT II-2, and PT 11-3 (12) | 1 year | F | Endogamous Pakistani | c.1294G>T | Constitutional symptoms (intermittent fever, night sweats, fatigue), severe thrombocytopenia, photosensitive and petechial rash, scarring alopecia, and hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | SLE (acuta cutaneous lupus, oral/nasal ulcers) | AIHA, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, positive ANA (1:1,280), anti-dsDNA, antiphospholipid antibody, low complement, elevated CRP and ESR, elevated IgG, and low levels of C4 | Steroid, rituximab (discontinued for adverse reaction), IVIG, hydroxychloroquine, Azathioprine, and Ofatumumab | NR | Alive |
| 1 year | F | Endogamous Pakistani | c.1294G>T | Constitutional symptoms (intermittent fever, night sweats, fatigue), severe thrombocytopenia, photosensitive and petechial rash, scarring alopecia, hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy | SLE (acute cutaneous lupus, serositis, and renal impairment) | AIHA, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, slight neutropenia, positive ANA (1:1,280), anti-dsDNA, antiphospholipid antibody, and low complement, elevated CRP and ESR, elevated albumin/creatinine ratio, hypergammaglobulinemia, and low levels of C4 | Steroid, IVIG, rituximab (discontinued for adverse reaction),h ydroxychloroquine, Azathioprine, and Ofatumumab | NR | Alive | |
| 26 mo | M | Endogamous Pakistani | c.1294G>T | Constitutional symptoms (intermittent fever, night sweats, fatigue), severe thrombocytopenia, photosensitive and petechial rash, scarring alopecia, and hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Hepatosplenomegaly | SLE (acute cutaneous lupus) | AIHA, thrombocytopenia, positive ANA (1:1,280), anti-dsDNA, anti-Smith antibody, and low complement | Steroid (IV methylprednisolone), IVIG, and rituximab | NR | Alive | |
| Sharifinejad et al., 2020, PT10 (13) | Infancy | M | Afghan | c.1293_1294insA | Recurrent oral candidiasis, nonsevere upper respiratory and gastrointestinal tract infections, and food allergy | Pneumonia, oral candidiasis, and recurrent gastroenteritis | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | SLE | Increased DNT, reduced NK number, increased IgG, and nonprotective antidiphtheria | Corticosteroids, antibiotic prophylaxis | 13 years | Alive |
| Neehus et al., 2021, PT13-17 (14) | 1 year | F | Turkish | c.571+2dup | BCGosis, fever, left axillary, retroauricular, and cervical lymphadenopathies | BCGosis, Salmonella bacteremia, Staphylococcus aureus lymphadenitis, and recurrent gingivitis | Lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly | SLE | Elevated naive B cells and reduced B memory, with elevated CD21low and transitional cells, hypogammaglobulinemia, ANA+, and anti-dsDNA+ | Steroids IVIG Antimycobacterial (ceftriaxone); antibiotic prophylaxis (amoxicillin) | 14 years | Alive |
| 7 mo | M | Turkish | c.1384C>T | Fever, diarrhea, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, left axillary lymphadenopathy with purulent discharge, and BCGitis | BCGitis, recurrent gastroenteritis | Hepatosplenomegaly | AIHA | Impaired DHR test and ANA+ | Steroids Isoniazid Rifampicin | 10 years | Alive | |
| 7 mo | M | Turkish | c.1384C>T | BCGitis | BCGitis, recurrent gastroenteritis and shingles | Lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly | AIHA | Impaired DHR test and ANA+ | Steroids Isoniazid Rifampicin IVIG | 7 years | Alive | |
| 1 year | F | Irani | c.642del | BCGitis | BCGitis | Hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | None | Impaired DHR test and nonprotective antibody responses to tetanus and diphtheria | Isoniazid Rifampicin Azithromycin | 3 years | Alive | |
| NR | M | Irani | c.642del | Asymptomatic | None | None | None | Impaired DHR test | No treatment | 6 years | Alive | |
| Gu et al., 2021, PT16-17 (15) and Jefferson et al., 2023 (3) | 6 y | M | Chinese | c.36T>G | Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and recurrent infections | NR | Splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | Pancytopenia | Positive antibodies for EBV, CMV, herpes simplex virus, and rubella viruses, increased TCRαβ DNT, increased CD8+ T cells and IgG, and low levels of NK cells | Steroids, IRT, and sirolimus | 10 years | Alive |
| NR | F | Chinese | c.36T>G | Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and anemia | NR | Splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy | Anemia | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Yang et al., 2022, PT18 (18) | 5 mo | F | Chinese | c.661C>T | Recurrent fever, respiratory tract infections, and lymphadenopathy | URTIs and BCGosis | Multiple lymphadenopathy (abdominal mesenteric lymph nodes invading the abdominal wall), bone marrow hyperplasia, and hepatosplenomegaly | NR | Increased DNT, elevated CD8+ T cells, low levels of CD4+ T cells, and CRP positive | Isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, sirolimus, IFN-γ, and antibiotics | 8 years | Alive |
| Neehus et al., 2022, PT19 (19) | 2 years | F | American | c.285C>A/c.376C>T | URTI, lymphadenitis | Burkholderia cepacia and Mycobacterium lentiflavum lymphadenopathy | Infectious lymphadenopathy | None | Low levels of CD4+ T cells, decreased relative proportions of CD27+IgD+ and CD27+IgD− memory B cells, and abnormally low DHR test | Cotrimoxazole, isoniazid, and Rifampicin | 5 years | Alive |
| Roderick et al., 2023, PT20-21 (9) | 9 mo | M | British | c.788-2A>G/c.571C>T | Listeria meningitis | Listeria meningitis, Enterococcus faecium bacteremia, varicella and shingles, invasive Candida infection, recurrent episodes of Achromobacter xylosoxidans cervical lymphadenitis, and early-onset enterocolitis | Lymphoid hyperplasia and splenomegaly | SLE, AIHA, and ITP | Increased DNTs, low B cells with low IgG with high IgM, positive anticardiolipin antibodies, Coombs positive, and positive thyroid peroxidase antibodies | Steroids, IVIG, rituximab, Sirolimus, Hydroxychloroquine, HSCT, and cyclosporine (for GVHD prophylaxis) | NR | Alive |
| 20 mo | F | British | c.788-2A>G/c.571C>T | Sepsis due to nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae | Early-onset enterocolitis | Lymphoid hyperplasia, splenomegaly | SLE | Increased DNTs, low B cells with low IgG and high IgM, positive anticardiolipin antibodies, and GAD antibody-positive | IVIG replacement therapy, rituximab, sirolimus (stopped because of oral ulceration), MMF, and hydroxychloroquine HSCT | 8.5 years | Alive |
AIHA, autoimmune hemolytic anemia; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; ANA, antinuclear antibody; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BCG, Bacillus Calmette-Guérin; CMV, cytomegalovirus; CNS, central nervous system; CRP, C-reactive protein; C3; complement component 3; C4; complement component 4; DHR, dihydrorhodamine; DNTs, double-negative T cells; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; EBV, Epstein-Barr virus; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; F, female; GAD, glutamic acid decarboxylase; GVHD, graft-versus-host disease; IFN-γ, interferon γ; IRT, immunoglobulin replacement therapy; ITP, immune thrombocytopenia; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulin; LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection; M, male; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; NK, natural killer; NR, not reported; PT, patient; RNP, ribonucleoprotein; SLE, systemic lupus erythematous; SSA, Sjögren syndrome type A; TCR, T cell receptor; URTI, upper respiratory tract infections; UTI, urinary tract infection; WHO, World Health Organization.
Leniolisib, a selective PI3Kδ inhibitor, is approved only for the treatment of activated PI3Kδ syndrome (APDS) in patients aged ≥12 years (18). APDS is characterized by increased AKT/mTOR signaling due to hyperactive PI3Kδ (19, 20). Inhibition restored immune cell function while attenuating lymphoproliferation (21, 22, 23). Here we present the first successful application of leniolisib for the treatment of PRKCD deficiency.
Results
A 14-year-old male offspring of consanguineous parents (first cousins) was diagnosed with a pathogenic homozygous variant in PRKCD (NM_006254.4, c.1352+1G>A), leading to protein loss (1, 2). The parents were unavailable for segregation testing, but an older brother who experienced primary immunodeficiency with lymphoproliferation, autoimmunity, and predominant renal involvement had the same biallelic variant. The sibling clinical picture was characterized by membranous glomerulonephritis leading to chronic kidney disease in a solitary kidney, organizing pneumonia with splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, and recurrent infections. Since early childhood, the proband experienced multiple hospitalizations for invasive bacterial and viral infections, including multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis sepsis, human herpesvirus six encephalitis, recurrent Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia, perforated Pseudomonas aeruginosa otitis media, and two episodes of respiratory syncytial virus pneumonia. Immunophenotyping revealed reduced memory B cells, increased transitional B cells, elevated immunoglobulin (Ig)M, and hypogammaglobulinemia that were treated with Ig replacement therapy and antibacterial prophylaxis. Moreover, he experienced autoimmunity and lymphoproliferation. In fact, by 12 years of age, he developed alopecia areata, trilineage cytopenia, autoimmune hepatitis, enteritis, splenomegaly, fluctuating lymphadenopathies, and thymic hyperplasia. Table 2 summarizes baseline findings.
Clinical, immune, and radiological assessments pre-sirolimus and pre-leniolisib treatments
| . | Pre-sirolimus assessment . | Details pre-sirolimus . | Pre-leniolisib assessment . | Details pre-leniolisib . |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 12 years 6 mo | | 14 years 1 mo | |
| Weight | 29.4 kg | −2.39 SD | 34.8 kg | −2.53 SD |
| Height | 133.1 cm | −2.80 SD | 147.9 cm | −2.04 SD |
| Clinical manifestation | Severe recurrent infections | Encephalitis—HHV-6 Sepsis—S. aureus Recurrent otitis—P. aeruginosa Pneumonia RSV—M. pneumoniae | Recurrent respiratory infections | Upper respiratory infection not requiring hospitalization |
| Alopecia areata | Alopecia areata of the scalp, three patches, partial response to topical and systemic steroids | Alopecia areata | Smaller patches and fluctuating course with topical steroids | |
| Dysimmune hepatitis | Hepatitis with mild cholestasis and normal liver function. Anti-SM antibodies positivity and anti-LKM antibodies negativity. Histology: Rich portal and lobular lymphocytic infiltrate with occasional interface expression with CD3+ as predominant component. | Dysimmune hepatitis | Residual self-limiting sporadic increase in transaminase levels | |
| Splenomegaly | Spleen (US) 16 cm (bipolar diameter) with hypoechoic intraparenchymal areas with a maximum diameter of ∼19 mm | Splenomegaly | Spleen (US) 12 cm (bipolar diameter), heterogeneous echotexture due to the persistence of some hypoechoic areas with ill-defined margins, not clearly vascularized, and containing some hyperechoic components consistent with calcifications Spleen (MRI) 13 cm, with some vaguely hypointense nodular-like areas are observed on T2W | |
| Persistent lymphadenopathies | US (max dimensions) LTC lymph nodes L 21 × 9 mm, R 14 × 6 mm | Fluctuating lymphadenopathies | US (max dimensions) LTC lymph nodes R 15 × 6 mm; L 14 × 5 mm, reduced echogenicity and poor visualization of the hilum Submandibular lymph nodes R 20 × 6 mm; L 15 × 7 mm, regular echotexture Axillary lymph nodes R 15 × 3 mm; L 12 × 6 mm, regular echotexture Supra clavicular lymph nodes L 10 × 4 mm, regular echotexture MRI (max dimensions) LTC lymph nodes 2.3 cm Armpit lymph nodes 1.9 cm | |
| Enteritis | Alternating bowel habits with episodes of diarrhea EGDs: Macroscopically normal findings Colonoscopy: Findings normal except for aptha on the edge of the ileocecal valve Histology: Increased neutrophilic, eosinophilic, lympho-plasmacytic, and granulocytic inflammatory component partially aggressive with plasma cells. Numerous foamy histiocytes in the left colon. Marked increase in duodenal intraepithelial T cells. Complete intestinal metaplasia of the gastric antrum | Pulmonary interstitial disease | CT scan: multiple areas of air trapping with subsegmental distribution in the right lower lobe. Hypoventilation. Bilateral basal fibrotic hypoventilatory streaks Plethysmography: Air trapping with increased airway resistance. TLC: 2.72 L (78%), RV: 1.27 L (146%), RV/TLC: 44 (178%). FEV1/FVC 93% DLCO 4.77 (73%) for VA reduced (2.09, 58%). Kco slightly increased (2.28, 124%) | |
| Thymic hyperplasia | CT (diameter): 5 × 1.7 × 7 cm, cervical extension to the jugular veins, contrast enhancement | |||
| Hematological | Thrombocytopenia Persistent leukopenia Anemia | Worst value recorded PLT count, 124.000/mm3 WBC count, 2,020/mm3 Hb level, 9 g/dl | Thrombocytopenia Fluctuant leukopenia | Worst value recorded PLT count, 114.000/mm3 WBC count, 2,420/mm3 |
| Immune evaluation | Major immunophenotype anomalies: B cells (CD19+) Reduced memory B Slightly expanded transitional B cell Slightly expanded CD21low Senescent CD8 | 15% (124 cell/µl) 1% (39% non-switched) 10% 4.7% n.a. | Major immunophenotype anomalies: B cells (CD19+) Memory B cell Expanded transitional B cell Slightly expanded CD21low Expanded senescent CD8 | 11% (120 cells/ul) 4% (89% non-switched) 20% 4.2% 13% |
| IgG IgM IgA | 934 mg/dl preinfusion in IRT 257 mg/dl 68 mg/dl | IgG IgM IgA | 1,007 mg/dl 66 mg/dl 38 mg/dl | |
| Medications | | Dosage/frequency | | Dosage/frequency |
| SCIG replacement | 15 g/mo | SCIG replacement | 15 g/mo | |
| PEP mask | prescribed but not performed | PEP mask | prescribed but not performed | |
| TMP-SMX | 160 mg/800 mg | TMP-SMX | 160 mg/800 mg | |
| Folic acid | one tablet three times per wk | Folic acid | 1 tablet three times per wk | |
| Phytomenadione | 5 mg/day twice per wk | Phytomenadione | 5 mg/day twice per wk | |
| Cholecalciferol 25,000 IU | One vial every 3 wk | Cholecalciferol 25,000 UI | 1 vial every 3 wk | |
| | | Sirolimus | 3.5 mg/day | |
| | | Testosterone | 25 mg/mo intramuscular |
| . | Pre-sirolimus assessment . | Details pre-sirolimus . | Pre-leniolisib assessment . | Details pre-leniolisib . |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 12 years 6 mo | | 14 years 1 mo | |
| Weight | 29.4 kg | −2.39 SD | 34.8 kg | −2.53 SD |
| Height | 133.1 cm | −2.80 SD | 147.9 cm | −2.04 SD |
| Clinical manifestation | Severe recurrent infections | Encephalitis—HHV-6 Sepsis—S. aureus Recurrent otitis—P. aeruginosa Pneumonia RSV—M. pneumoniae | Recurrent respiratory infections | Upper respiratory infection not requiring hospitalization |
| Alopecia areata | Alopecia areata of the scalp, three patches, partial response to topical and systemic steroids | Alopecia areata | Smaller patches and fluctuating course with topical steroids | |
| Dysimmune hepatitis | Hepatitis with mild cholestasis and normal liver function. Anti-SM antibodies positivity and anti-LKM antibodies negativity. Histology: Rich portal and lobular lymphocytic infiltrate with occasional interface expression with CD3+ as predominant component. | Dysimmune hepatitis | Residual self-limiting sporadic increase in transaminase levels | |
| Splenomegaly | Spleen (US) 16 cm (bipolar diameter) with hypoechoic intraparenchymal areas with a maximum diameter of ∼19 mm | Splenomegaly | Spleen (US) 12 cm (bipolar diameter), heterogeneous echotexture due to the persistence of some hypoechoic areas with ill-defined margins, not clearly vascularized, and containing some hyperechoic components consistent with calcifications Spleen (MRI) 13 cm, with some vaguely hypointense nodular-like areas are observed on T2W | |
| Persistent lymphadenopathies | US (max dimensions) LTC lymph nodes L 21 × 9 mm, R 14 × 6 mm | Fluctuating lymphadenopathies | US (max dimensions) LTC lymph nodes R 15 × 6 mm; L 14 × 5 mm, reduced echogenicity and poor visualization of the hilum Submandibular lymph nodes R 20 × 6 mm; L 15 × 7 mm, regular echotexture Axillary lymph nodes R 15 × 3 mm; L 12 × 6 mm, regular echotexture Supra clavicular lymph nodes L 10 × 4 mm, regular echotexture MRI (max dimensions) LTC lymph nodes 2.3 cm Armpit lymph nodes 1.9 cm | |
| Enteritis | Alternating bowel habits with episodes of diarrhea EGDs: Macroscopically normal findings Colonoscopy: Findings normal except for aptha on the edge of the ileocecal valve Histology: Increased neutrophilic, eosinophilic, lympho-plasmacytic, and granulocytic inflammatory component partially aggressive with plasma cells. Numerous foamy histiocytes in the left colon. Marked increase in duodenal intraepithelial T cells. Complete intestinal metaplasia of the gastric antrum | Pulmonary interstitial disease | CT scan: multiple areas of air trapping with subsegmental distribution in the right lower lobe. Hypoventilation. Bilateral basal fibrotic hypoventilatory streaks Plethysmography: Air trapping with increased airway resistance. TLC: 2.72 L (78%), RV: 1.27 L (146%), RV/TLC: 44 (178%). FEV1/FVC 93% DLCO 4.77 (73%) for VA reduced (2.09, 58%). Kco slightly increased (2.28, 124%) | |
| Thymic hyperplasia | CT (diameter): 5 × 1.7 × 7 cm, cervical extension to the jugular veins, contrast enhancement | |||
| Hematological | Thrombocytopenia Persistent leukopenia Anemia | Worst value recorded PLT count, 124.000/mm3 WBC count, 2,020/mm3 Hb level, 9 g/dl | Thrombocytopenia Fluctuant leukopenia | Worst value recorded PLT count, 114.000/mm3 WBC count, 2,420/mm3 |
| Immune evaluation | Major immunophenotype anomalies: B cells (CD19+) Reduced memory B Slightly expanded transitional B cell Slightly expanded CD21low Senescent CD8 | 15% (124 cell/µl) 1% (39% non-switched) 10% 4.7% n.a. | Major immunophenotype anomalies: B cells (CD19+) Memory B cell Expanded transitional B cell Slightly expanded CD21low Expanded senescent CD8 | 11% (120 cells/ul) 4% (89% non-switched) 20% 4.2% 13% |
| IgG IgM IgA | 934 mg/dl preinfusion in IRT 257 mg/dl 68 mg/dl | IgG IgM IgA | 1,007 mg/dl 66 mg/dl 38 mg/dl | |
| Medications | | Dosage/frequency | | Dosage/frequency |
| SCIG replacement | 15 g/mo | SCIG replacement | 15 g/mo | |
| PEP mask | prescribed but not performed | PEP mask | prescribed but not performed | |
| TMP-SMX | 160 mg/800 mg | TMP-SMX | 160 mg/800 mg | |
| Folic acid | one tablet three times per wk | Folic acid | 1 tablet three times per wk | |
| Phytomenadione | 5 mg/day twice per wk | Phytomenadione | 5 mg/day twice per wk | |
| Cholecalciferol 25,000 IU | One vial every 3 wk | Cholecalciferol 25,000 UI | 1 vial every 3 wk | |
| | | Sirolimus | 3.5 mg/day | |
| | | Testosterone | 25 mg/mo intramuscular |
Ab, antibody; DLCO, diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide; EGDs, esophagogastroduodenoscopies; Hb, hemoglobin; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; FVC, forced vital capacity; HHV6, human herpesvirus 6; IRT, immunoglobulin replacement therapy; Kco, carbon monoxide transfer coefficient; LKM, liver kidney microsome; L, left; LTC, laterocervical; PEP, positive expiratory pressure; PLT, platelet; R, right; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; RV, residual volume; SCIG, subcutaneous immunoglobulin; SM, smooth muscle; TLC, total lung capacity; TMP-SMX, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole; UI, international units; US, ultrasound; VA, alveolar volume; WBC, white blood cell.
To address autoimmunity and lymphoproliferation, rapamycin was selected as a first-line treatment. Hepatic cytolysis and spleen size reduced, while cytopenias improved. Fluctuating lymphadenopathies, leukopenia, and spleen lesions persisted; thymic hyperplasia progressed. Despite the adequate rapamycin dose and plasma levels at the upper-end of therapeutic range, during rapamycin treatment, the patient developed severe, asymptomatic, infiltrative lung disease characterized by a restrictive pattern on lung function tests, reduced diffusing capacity, and evidence of interstitial involvement. Differential considerations, including PRKCD-related disease progression and potential hypersensitivity to rapamycin, precluded establishing the cause of lung involvement (24). Because the pulmonary involvement could not be clearly attributed to PRKCD-related progression versus drug toxicity, and because the patient’s sirolimus trough levels were already at the upper end of the therapeutic range, further dose escalation was not considered safe. Rapamycin treatment was therefore withdrawn due to lack of efficacy and/or potential causative role in lung disease.
Given ongoing multisystem disease activity and the need to prevent further organ damage, we considered several therapeutic alternatives to sirolimus. A steroid-sparing strategy was prioritized in a preadolescent patient experiencing significant growth restriction, delayed pubertal development, and immunodeficiency. B cell depletors were deemed unsuitable due to anecdotal association with disease relapse and lack of effectiveness in the patient’s brother. In addition, it is increasingly clear that prolonged B cell depletion is not without significant consequences beyond secondary hypogammaglobulinemia. This approach entails risks such as sustained B cell aplasia, which cannot be fully mitigated by Ig replacement, particularly in a preadolescent with PRKCD deficiency affecting both B and T cell compartments.
Mycophenolate mofetil and other broad immunosuppressants were considered suboptimal due to limited evidence of durable control in PRKCD deficiency and the risk of cumulative toxicity in a preadolescent with underlying immunodeficiency. HSCT was not pursued due to multiorgan involvement, the uncertain impact of the PRKCD variant on extra-hematopoietic tissues, and limited data on outcomes.
Compassionate use of leniolisib was based on a precision, pathway-guided rationale with multiple clinical, molecular, and laboratory indicators of PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway hyperactivity (Fig. 1). The index patient’s clinical and immune phenotypes overlapped with APDS. His T cells exhibited ex vivo hyper-phosphorylation of S6—an established downstream surrogate marker of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR axis, analogous to pAKT and used here as a proxy for mTOR activation (25)—at levels comparable to those observed in APDS patients. These findings align with the partial clinical response observed during rapamycin treatment and highlighting the in vivo relevance of pathway hyperactivity. We observed ex vivo normalization of stimulated phospho-S6 (pS6) in patient CD4+ and CD8+ T cells after experimental addition of rapamycin or idelalisib (a selective PI3Kδ inhibitor). Research suggests that PRKCD variants impair the inhibitory function of PKCδ on the PI3K pathway, strengthening the use of PI3Kδ inhibition to target underlying immune dysregulation (5). We performed the same in vitro pS6 assay, with addition rapamycin and idelalisib, in the older sibling obtaining comparable results—again consistent with mTOR pathway hyperactivity and normalization of S6 phosphorylation to healthy-donor levels upon pharmacologic inhibition (Fig. 1 C). The sibling was not considered a suitable candidate for in vivo administration of leniolisib for the end-stage kidney disease, which may have unanticipated impact on pharmacokinetics and plasma concentrations.
Based on this rationale, leniolisib was administered according to a compassionate-use protocol in this 14-year-old patient (weight 34.8 kg) and titrated to a maintenance dose of 40 mg twice daily; details of dose escalation are provided in the supplementary material. At the time of writing, the patient has received leniolisib for a total of 10 mo. Fig. 2 depicts the timeline of leniolisib treatment. The patient did not experience serious adverse events. Nonserious adverse events commonly reported among patients with APDS receiving leniolisib such as infections, skin rashes, gastrointestinal symptoms, fatigue, neutropenia, and elevated liver enzymes were not observed.
Timeline of leniolisib treatment protocol with dosage escalation and monitoring tests. The timeline spans from negative three weeks to positive thirty-six weeks. The dosage escalates from ten milligrams twice daily to forty milligrams twice daily. Key events include ultrasonography of abdomen and neck, pneumology evaluation, electrocardiogram, quality of life assessment, phosphorylated S six assay, M R I of abdomen, thorax, and neck, high-resolution C T of thorax, and discontinuation of sirolimus. Extended lab tests in clinical settings and restricted lab tests at home are conducted at specified intervals. Icons represent different tests and evaluations, with colors indicating the type of test.
Leniolisib treatment protocol. Bid, twice daily; CBC complete blood cell count; INR, international normalized ratio; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; SGOT, serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase; SGPT, serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase.
Timeline of leniolisib treatment protocol with dosage escalation and monitoring tests. The timeline spans from negative three weeks to positive thirty-six weeks. The dosage escalates from ten milligrams twice daily to forty milligrams twice daily. Key events include ultrasonography of abdomen and neck, pneumology evaluation, electrocardiogram, quality of life assessment, phosphorylated S six assay, M R I of abdomen, thorax, and neck, high-resolution C T of thorax, and discontinuation of sirolimus. Extended lab tests in clinical settings and restricted lab tests at home are conducted at specified intervals. Icons represent different tests and evaluations, with colors indicating the type of test.
Leniolisib treatment protocol. Bid, twice daily; CBC complete blood cell count; INR, international normalized ratio; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; SGOT, serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase; SGPT, serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase.
Sustained disease control and multiparameter improvement were evident (Table 3). The patient engaged in academic, social, and athletic activities. Self-perceived quality of life improved. Neither infections requiring hospitalization nor mild recurrent infections were reported. One episode of self-limiting enteritis was reported after the observation period. Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole was discontinued 8 mo after leniolisib initiation. Alopecia areata resolved without the need for topical glucocorticoids. No new autoimmune manifestations were observed. Cervical and axillary lymphadenopathy resolved.
Post-leniolisib treatment parameters
| . | Details . | T + 8 wk . | T + 12 wk . | T + 16 wk . | T + 24 wk . | T + 36 wk . |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auxological parameters | Weight | 35.5 kg | 35.5 kg | 36.2 kg | 38 kg | 38.2 kg |
| Height | 149.6 cm | n.a. | n.a. | 154 cm | 154 cm | |
| QoL (SF-36), % | | | | 66% | | 82% |
| Hematological | Hb level | 14.6 g/dl | 14.4 g/dl | 15.5 g/dl | 15.8 g/dl | 16.8 g/dl |
| WBC count | 5,240/mm3 | 4,970/mm3 | 4,120/mm3 | 4,600/mm3 | 5,060/mm3 | |
| Lymphocyte count | 1,938/mm3 | 2,160/mm3 | 1,830/mm3 | 2,120/mm3 | 2,300/mm3 | |
| PLT count | 158,000/mm3 | 169,000/mm3 | 165,000/mm3 | 150,000/mm3 | 192,000/mm3 | |
| Immunophenotype | CD3 | 1,656/mm3 | 1,866/mm3 | 1,541/mm3 | 1,594/mm3 | 1,435/mm3 |
| CD4 | 1,183/mm3 | 1,265/mm3 | 1,119/mm3 | 1,111/mm3 | 992/mm3 | |
| CD8 | 429/mm3 | 551/mm3 | 401/mm3 | 466/mm3 | 424/mm3 | |
| CD19 | 190/mm3 | 251/mm3 | 213/mm3 | 269/mm3 | 307/mm3 | |
| CD16-56 | 122/mm3 | 193/mm3 | 145/mm3 | 180/mm3 | 204/mm3 | |
| Naive B cell | 180/mm3 | 241/mm3 | 200/mm3 | 261/mm3 | 298/mm3 | |
| Memory B cell | 6/mm3 | 10/mm3 | 10.7/mm3 | 13.3/mm3 | 12/mm3 | |
| Transitional B cell | 15% | 15% | 5.8% | 4.7% | 1.6% | |
| Naive CD4 cell | 733/mm3 | 746/mm3 | 615/mm3 | 855/mm3 | 798/mm3 | |
| Naive CD8 cell | 197/mm3 | 28/mm3 | 180/mm3c | 89/mm3 | 224/mm3 | |
| IgG | 682 mg/dl | 686 mg/dl | 769 mg/dl | - | 979 mg/dl | |
| IgM | 67 mg/dl | 39 mg/dl | 40 mg/dl | 36 mg/dl | 32 mg/dl | |
| IgA | 31 mg/dl | 26 mg/dl | 25 mg/dl | 24 mg/dl | 30 mg/dl | |
| Lung function | DLCO-Plethysmography | | | TLC: 2.88 L RV/TLC: 31% Reduction in air trapping, plethysmography improved | | |
| Radiological CT | Thymus | | | | | Volume reduction: 44.62% |
| Lung | | | | | Resolution of consolidation bands and tree-in-bud appearance, less prominent “mosaic attenuation areas” | |
| Lymph nodes | | | | | The left axillary lymph node shows a reduction in size and postcontrast enhancement | |
| Radiological MRI | LTC lymph nodes | | Max 1.8 cm | | Max 2.1 cm | |
| Axillary lymph nodes | | n.a. | | Max 1.3 cm | | |
| Spleen | | 13 cm | | 12.5 cm (volume reduction of 52.37% vs. pre-leniolisib); the hypointense nodular area within the splenic parenchyma is no longer identifiable | | |
| Radiological US | LTC lymph nodes | | <1 cm | | <1 cm | |
| Submandibular lymph nodes | | R 18 × 6 mm | | R 12 × 4 mm L 13 × 5 mm | | |
| Axillary lymph nodes | | <1 cm | | R 17 × 3 mm L 18 × 3 mm | | |
| Subclavicular lymph nodes | | <1 cm | | <1 cm | | |
| Spleen | | 12.3 cm | | 11 cm | |
| . | Details . | T + 8 wk . | T + 12 wk . | T + 16 wk . | T + 24 wk . | T + 36 wk . |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auxological parameters | Weight | 35.5 kg | 35.5 kg | 36.2 kg | 38 kg | 38.2 kg |
| Height | 149.6 cm | n.a. | n.a. | 154 cm | 154 cm | |
| QoL (SF-36), % | | | | 66% | | 82% |
| Hematological | Hb level | 14.6 g/dl | 14.4 g/dl | 15.5 g/dl | 15.8 g/dl | 16.8 g/dl |
| WBC count | 5,240/mm3 | 4,970/mm3 | 4,120/mm3 | 4,600/mm3 | 5,060/mm3 | |
| Lymphocyte count | 1,938/mm3 | 2,160/mm3 | 1,830/mm3 | 2,120/mm3 | 2,300/mm3 | |
| PLT count | 158,000/mm3 | 169,000/mm3 | 165,000/mm3 | 150,000/mm3 | 192,000/mm3 | |
| Immunophenotype | CD3 | 1,656/mm3 | 1,866/mm3 | 1,541/mm3 | 1,594/mm3 | 1,435/mm3 |
| CD4 | 1,183/mm3 | 1,265/mm3 | 1,119/mm3 | 1,111/mm3 | 992/mm3 | |
| CD8 | 429/mm3 | 551/mm3 | 401/mm3 | 466/mm3 | 424/mm3 | |
| CD19 | 190/mm3 | 251/mm3 | 213/mm3 | 269/mm3 | 307/mm3 | |
| CD16-56 | 122/mm3 | 193/mm3 | 145/mm3 | 180/mm3 | 204/mm3 | |
| Naive B cell | 180/mm3 | 241/mm3 | 200/mm3 | 261/mm3 | 298/mm3 | |
| Memory B cell | 6/mm3 | 10/mm3 | 10.7/mm3 | 13.3/mm3 | 12/mm3 | |
| Transitional B cell | 15% | 15% | 5.8% | 4.7% | 1.6% | |
| Naive CD4 cell | 733/mm3 | 746/mm3 | 615/mm3 | 855/mm3 | 798/mm3 | |
| Naive CD8 cell | 197/mm3 | 28/mm3 | 180/mm3c | 89/mm3 | 224/mm3 | |
| IgG | 682 mg/dl | 686 mg/dl | 769 mg/dl | - | 979 mg/dl | |
| IgM | 67 mg/dl | 39 mg/dl | 40 mg/dl | 36 mg/dl | 32 mg/dl | |
| IgA | 31 mg/dl | 26 mg/dl | 25 mg/dl | 24 mg/dl | 30 mg/dl | |
| Lung function | DLCO-Plethysmography | | | TLC: 2.88 L RV/TLC: 31% Reduction in air trapping, plethysmography improved | | |
| Radiological CT | Thymus | | | | | Volume reduction: 44.62% |
| Lung | | | | | Resolution of consolidation bands and tree-in-bud appearance, less prominent “mosaic attenuation areas” | |
| Lymph nodes | | | | | The left axillary lymph node shows a reduction in size and postcontrast enhancement | |
| Radiological MRI | LTC lymph nodes | | Max 1.8 cm | | Max 2.1 cm | |
| Axillary lymph nodes | | n.a. | | Max 1.3 cm | | |
| Spleen | | 13 cm | | 12.5 cm (volume reduction of 52.37% vs. pre-leniolisib); the hypointense nodular area within the splenic parenchyma is no longer identifiable | | |
| Radiological US | LTC lymph nodes | | <1 cm | | <1 cm | |
| Submandibular lymph nodes | | R 18 × 6 mm | | R 12 × 4 mm L 13 × 5 mm | | |
| Axillary lymph nodes | | <1 cm | | R 17 × 3 mm L 18 × 3 mm | | |
| Subclavicular lymph nodes | | <1 cm | | <1 cm | | |
| Spleen | | 12.3 cm | | 11 cm | |
DLCO, diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide; Hb, hemoglobin; L, left; LTC, laterocervical; NA, not applicable; PLT, platelet; QoL, quality of life; R, right; RV, residual volume; SF-36, 36-Item Short Form Health Survey; T, time; TLC, total lung capacity; US, ultrasound; WBC, white blood cell.
Lung volumes and alveolar diffusing capacity improved despite the patient never undergoing prescribed respiratory physiotherapy and current tobacco use. Computed tomography (CT) scans performed before and after treatment revealed favorable structural changes related to interstitial lung disease, reduction of bronchiectasis and air trapping, and resolution of the tree-in-bud pattern (Fig. 3 A). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasonography showed a progressive reduction in the size of the spleen (52.4%; Fig. 3 B), lymph nodes, and thymus (44.6%; Fig. 3 C) (Table S1). Splenic lesions resolved, and structural homogeneity was maintained.
Panel a shows H R C T scans lungs before after treatment showing improvement; Panel b shows M R I scans spleen showing resolution of nodular lesion after treatment; Panel c shows C T scans thymus demonstrating structural changes before and after therapy; Panel d shows line graphs depicting T-cell subset counts during treatment period; Panel e shows line graphs showing B-cell counts and immunoglobulin changes over time; Panel f shows line graphs indicating changes in transitional B-cells and senescent T-cells; Panel g shows flow cytometry histograms of p S 6 expression in T-cells comparing conditions.
Pulmonary, lymphoproliferation, immunophenotype, and pS6 changes. (A) HRCT scans of the lungs before and after treatment with leniolisib. Treatment resolved consolidation streaks and the “tree-in-bud” pattern (circles). Mosaic attenuation areas persist but are less pronounced compared with pretreatment examination (arrows). (B) MRI scans of the spleen before sirolimus and leniolisib and after treatment with leniolisib. A nodular hypointense area in the splenic parenchyma visible in earlier scans (white arrows) was no longer detectable during treatment with leniolisib. (C) CT scans of the thymus before and after treatment with leniolisib. (D–F) Immunophenotyping during leniolisib treatment. (D) Absolute T cell subset counts. (E) Absolute counts of total and naive B cells and IgM levels. (F) Percentage of transitional B cells, CD21low B cells, and senescent CD8+ T cells. (G) pS6 flow cytometry assay of stimulated and nonstimulated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from HD (top), and patient pre- (middle), and posttreatment with leniolisib (bottom). Elevated pS6 decreased after treatment with leniolisib. Comp-FITC-A, compensation control fluorescein isothiocyanate; HD, healthy donor; L, left; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; Pos, posterior; Pt, patient; R, right.
Panel a shows H R C T scans lungs before after treatment showing improvement; Panel b shows M R I scans spleen showing resolution of nodular lesion after treatment; Panel c shows C T scans thymus demonstrating structural changes before and after therapy; Panel d shows line graphs depicting T-cell subset counts during treatment period; Panel e shows line graphs showing B-cell counts and immunoglobulin changes over time; Panel f shows line graphs indicating changes in transitional B-cells and senescent T-cells; Panel g shows flow cytometry histograms of p S 6 expression in T-cells comparing conditions.
Pulmonary, lymphoproliferation, immunophenotype, and pS6 changes. (A) HRCT scans of the lungs before and after treatment with leniolisib. Treatment resolved consolidation streaks and the “tree-in-bud” pattern (circles). Mosaic attenuation areas persist but are less pronounced compared with pretreatment examination (arrows). (B) MRI scans of the spleen before sirolimus and leniolisib and after treatment with leniolisib. A nodular hypointense area in the splenic parenchyma visible in earlier scans (white arrows) was no longer detectable during treatment with leniolisib. (C) CT scans of the thymus before and after treatment with leniolisib. (D–F) Immunophenotyping during leniolisib treatment. (D) Absolute T cell subset counts. (E) Absolute counts of total and naive B cells and IgM levels. (F) Percentage of transitional B cells, CD21low B cells, and senescent CD8+ T cells. (G) pS6 flow cytometry assay of stimulated and nonstimulated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from HD (top), and patient pre- (middle), and posttreatment with leniolisib (bottom). Elevated pS6 decreased after treatment with leniolisib. Comp-FITC-A, compensation control fluorescein isothiocyanate; HD, healthy donor; L, left; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; Pos, posterior; Pt, patient; R, right.
Cytopenias resolved, with hemoglobin and platelets levels and white blood cell counts remaining within reference ranges (Table 3).
At presentation, absolute circulating B cell counts were at the lower end of the age-adjusted range, in the context of global lymphopenia. Immunophenotyping showed expansion of transitional B cells, reduction of memory B cells, and expansion of CD21low B cells, consistent with a block in B cell maturation. Serum IgM was elevated (hyper-IgM pattern). During treatment, T and B cell populations improved (Fig. 3, D–F and Table 3). CD3+, CD4+, and CD4+ naive T cells increased. The percentage and absolute counts of total and naive B cells increased. We observed an early decrease in transitional and CD21low B cells together with a fall in serum IgM, suggesting a partial release of this maturational block along the B cell lineage. Memory B cells showed only minimal early increase, which is expected to require longer time to recover.
During treatment, pS6 levels in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were comparable to healthy controls (Fig. 3 G). No differences in pS6 levels were detected in samples obtained 10 h (corresponding to half-life of leniolisib) or 1 h (corresponding to maximum plasma concentration) after leniolisib intake, suggesting stable normalization of mTOR activity between doses.
This was the first compassionate use of leniolisib for the treatment of an IEI other than APDS (26). Leniolisib was well tolerated and improved clinical and laboratory parameters that were only partially controlled with rapamycin. Quality of life also improved: fatigue, infections, lymphoproliferation, or cytopenias were not reported after initiating leniolisib. The patient did not require corticosteroids, B cell depletors, or additional antibiotic treatment while receiving leniolisib.
Lung performance improved, with enhancements in lung volumes and alveolar diffusing capacity. The absence of complete disease reversal after rapamycin withdrawal suggests that pulmonary involvement was due to underlying disease.
Spleen size reduction and improvement in splenic structural changes were observed; the latter was present during rapamycin therapy. Episodic, persistent lymph node enlargements, which continued with rapamycin treatment, resolved during leniolisib treatment. Blood cell counts, which previously fluctuated during rapamycin therapy, normalized. Leniolisib treatment improved immunophenotype abnormalities and was consistent with outcomes reported among patients with APDS (21, 22, 23). mTOR hyperactivity (elevated pS6) in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells reduced to healthy control levels following treatment.
Discussion
The molecular mechanisms underlying the impact of leniolisib in PRKCD deficiency and the precise interaction between PI3K and PKCδ require further elucidation. While findings from a single patient cannot be generalized, this experience supports the use of PI3Kδ inhibitors for the treatment of relevant IEIs besides APDS.
Clinical trials in APDS utilize a prescribed weight-based dosing strategy, but it is unknown if this dosing strategy is optimal in disorders such as PRKCD deficiency. Thus far, our patient has maintained a good response to 40 mg twice daily, but adjustments over time to account for growth and observed degree of clinical response will likely be needed.
One limitation of working with ultra-rare diseases is challenges compiling large cohorts of patients. International collaboration to identify cases is warranted to determine efficacious therapeutic strategies. Comprehensive selection of patients based on clinical, genetic, immunophenotypic, and molecular features—particularly those associated with AKT/mTOR pathway hyperactivity—will optimize efficacy and safety. Trials using selected patient populations may help establish leniolisib as an alternative to mTOR inhibitors, particularly in cases of inadequate disease control or adverse effects. Long-term monitoring will be essential to evaluate the overall safety and efficacy of leniolisib.
This case highlights the capability of leniolisib to address immunodeficiency and lymphoproliferation associated with PRKCD deficiency, paving the way for broader clinical applications in other IEIs and multifactorial immune-mediate diseases. In the era of computational drug repurposing, exploring the application of existing drugs for rare diseases is essential. This case supports the notion that healthcare professionals should rationally explore the application of exiting molecules for diseases where treatments are lacking or nonexistent.
Materials and methods
Treatment protocol and outcomes
Treatment protocol details are presented in Table S2, including dose-escalation strategy; clinical, laboratory, and imaging evaluations related to safety monitoring; and outcome achievements. Compassionate use of leniolisib was approved on April 26, 2024, by the Regional Pediatric Local Ethics Committee at Meyer Children’s Hospital, Florence. Both the legal representative and patient provided written informed consent before treatment initiation. Pharming Group N.V. provided free access to leniolisib for compassionate use.
Safety
Safety was assessed throughout the intervention period to monitor adverse events and ensure timely management. Adverse events were classified as serious, of special interest, or nonserious, with predefined thresholds for reporting and intervention. The “expected” adverse events (consistent with safety profile listed in prescribing information of leniolisib) included infections, gastrointestinal symptoms, skin manifestations, cytopenia, and elevation of liver enzymes. If safety thresholds were exceeded, adjustments or discontinuation of treatment were planned.
Treatment outcomes
Primary outcomes were selected to assess therapeutic impact on disease and patient health, based on clinical, imaging, and laboratory evaluations.
Key metrics:
Clinical parameters
Assessment of overall health status and health-related quality of life (36-Item Short Form Health Survey) (27), incidence of infections, absence of progression in preexisting autoimmune-associated manifestations (e.g., no increase in hepatic cytolysis markers, no extension of alopecia lesions, and no exacerbation of gastrointestinal involvement), assessment of newly emerging autoimmune phenomena, incidence of noninfectious lymphadenopathy episodes, and lung function assessment, including lung volumes and alveolar diffusing capacity.
Imaging parameters
Longitudinal assessment of lung, spleen, lymph nodes, and thymus size, along with characterization of structural abnormalities, evaluated through ultrasound, MRI (Achieva 3 Tesla, Philips) or high-resolution CT (HR-CT; TC Revolution, GE Medical Systems). Lung HR-CT was acquired using a lung parenchyma window with consistent acquisition and reconstruction parameters. Spleen MRI was acquired via T2-weighted Turbo Spin Echo sequence in the axial plane. Spleen volumetry was calculated using the IntelliSpace Portal (Philips). CT of the thymus was acquired using a mediastinal window inspiration. Thymus volumetry was calculated using the IntelliSpace Portal (Philips). CT of lymph nodes was acquired using a mediastinal window.
Hematologic parameters
Changes in hemoglobin concentration (g/dl), platelet count (×103/μl), absolute white blood cell count (×103/μl), and lymphocyte count (cells/μl).
Immunological parameters
Variations in the percentage and absolute number of naive B and T cells; transitional B cells and senescent T cells (percentage; cells/μl); plasma concentrations of IgM and IgA with IgG replacement therapy (mg/dl); variations in stimulated pS6 in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (geometric mean of mean fluorescence intensity). Reference ranges for immune subsets and IgM were age-matched and obtained from literature (28, 29, 30, 31). Ranges were as follows: B cells (CD19+), 226–370 cells/μl; naive B cells (CD27−IgD+), 171–293 cells/μl; transitional B cells (CD24++CD38++), 10–30 cells/μl −3.9 to 7.8%; CD21low B cells (CD21lowCD38low), 2–10 cells/μl −0.9 to 3.3%; CD3+ T cells, 954–2,332 × 106/L; CD4+ T cells, 610–1,446 × 106/L; CD8+ T cells, 282–749 × 106/L; naive CD4+ T cells (CD45RA+CCR7+CD4+), 230–770 × 106/L; naive CD8+ T cells (CD45RA+CCR7+CD8+), 240–710 × 106/L; senescent CD8+ T cells (CD57+CD8+), 10–40 cells/μl −1.83 to 25%; and IgM, 42.4–197 mg/dl.
pS6 assay
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs, 2 × 106) were plated in 96-well plates at the concentration of 2 × 105 cells per well in 200 μl of RPMI overnight at 37°C. For the stimulation, the plate was precoated with Mouse Anti-CD3 human (10 µg/μl) (86022706; Sigma-Aldrich) in 100 μl phosphate-buffered saline for 2 h. After dispensation of cells, 1 μl of Mouse Anti-Human CD28 (Purified NA/LE Mouse Clone CD28.2 [RUO], 555725, BD Biosciences) was added to each well.
After 24 h, PBMCs from the patient and a healthy control were stained for Mouse Anti-Human CD4 APC (555349; BD Pharmingen), Mouse Anti-Human CD8 PerCP-Cy5.5 (Clone SK1, 341050; BD Biosciences), and Rabbit Anti-Human Phospho-S6 Ribosomal Protein Antibody (Ser235/236) (BK2211LCST, Cell Signaling Technology). For secondary staining, Goat anti-Rabbit Ig Human ads-FITC antibody (Cat. No: 4010-02; Southern Biotech) was utilized. Cal101 and rapamycin were added before stimulation and used as inhibitors for PI3Kδ and mTOR, respectively, as previously described (32). All samples were collected with a FACSCanto flow cytometer and analyzed with FlowJo software. Data were analyzed using a two-sided independent samples Kruskal–Wallis test with Bonferroni correction.
Online supplemental material
Data availability
The data presented in this article are not readily available because of ethical and privacy restrictions. Requests to access the dataset should be directed to the corresponding author. Fig. 1 A was modified using https://BioRender.com.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the patient who took part in this case study and their family. Pharming Technologies, B.V. provided leniolisib at no cost and had no input in data interpretation. Pharming Group, Inc. funded manuscript editorial assistance by Precision AQ. Phospho-S6 assays were performed with the support of Fondazione Spedali Civili di Brescia and Fondazione Camillo Golgi. The data are available in the published article and its online supplemental material.
This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Author contributions: Lorenzo Lodi: conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, project administration, software, supervision, validation, visualization, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Valentina Guarnieri: conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, project administration, software, supervision, validation, visualization, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Matilde Peri: data curation, formal analysis, and writing—original draft. Manuela Baronio: data curation, investigation, methodology, resources, and writing—review and editing. Silvia Ricci: supervision, validation, visualization, and writing—review and editing. Clementina Canessa: conceptualization. Francesca Lippi: conceptualization and resources. Marta Voarino: conceptualization. Elisa Calistri: investigation, resources, validation, and visualization. Laura Pisano: resources. Anna Perrone: formal analysis and visualization. Grazia Fenu: resources and visualization. Giuseppe Indolfi: conceptualization, data curation, supervision, validation, and writing—original draft, review, and editing. Vassilios Lougaris: data curation, formal analysis, funding acquisition, methodology, resources, validation, and writing—review and editing. Rebecca A. Marsh: supervision and writing—review and editing. Chiara Azzari: conceptualization, methodology, project administration, resources, supervision, validation, and writing—review and editing (18).
References
Author notes
L. Lodi and V. Guarnieri contributed equally to this paper and are designated to have co-first authorship.
Disclosures: R.A. Marsh reported “other” from Pharming Healthcare outside the submitted work, and being employed part time by and owns stock in Pharming Healthcare, Warren, NJ. No other disclosures were reported.

