TB Research

Chronic granulomatous disease: Clinical, microbial, and genetic findings in 39 Colombian patients

Julián Rojas, Carlos A. Arango-Franco, Marcela Moncada‐Vélez, Diana Arboleda, Edgar Alfonso Figueredo, Manuela Molina, Juan Pablo Sánchez, Lina Marcela Zapata, et al. (47 authors)

Journal of Human Immunity · 2026-04

Abstract

Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is an inborn error of immunity of caused by pathogenic variants of genes encoding components of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase complex, resulting in defective reactive oxygen species production and impaired microbial killing. We conducted a multicenter evaluation of 39 Colombian patients with CGD from 32 unrelated kindreds, describing their clinical, microbiological, and genetic characteristics. Genetic analyses were performed for 31/39 patients and identified variants of the following genes: CYBB (n = 22), CYBA (n = 3), NCF1 (n = 1), NCF2 (n = 1), and NCF4 (n = 4). All but three of the patients had symptoms, the exceptions being individuals with p40phox deficiency. BCG-related complications occurred in eight patients, pulmonary tuberculosis in four, and Salmonella spp. bacteremia in 12 of 17 patients with Salmonella infections. Colombian patients with CGD had clinical and microbiological profiles similar to those reported across Latin America. The genetic findings broaden the regional variant spectrum and emphasize the need for earlier diagnosis and better access to specialist testing.

MeSH terms

  • Chronic granulomatous disease
  • Immunology
  • Medicine
  • Phagocyte
  • NADPH oxidase
  • Tuberculosis
  • Immunity
  • Gene
  • Bloodstream infection
  • Salmonella
  • Disease
  • Salmonella enterica
  • Pulmonary disease
  • Biology
  • Bacteremia