| Literature DB >> 22607519 |
Christoph Kuppe1, Saskia Westphal, Eva Bücher, Marcus J Moeller, Bernhard Heintz, Marion E Schneider, Jürgen Floege.
Abstract
We describe for the first time a case of macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) in a patient with a history of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour (inflammatory pseudotumour, IPT) of the lung and thoracic spine. The patient was admitted to the intensive care unit with a history of prolonged remitting fever, hepatosplenomegaly, bilaterally enlarged thoracic lymph nodes and an acute severe inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). Up-regulated cytokine production (e.g. IL-1ß and IL-6), increased levels of ferritin and circulating soluble interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R, sCD25) led to the differential diagnosis of MAS. Bone marrow aspiration, the main tool for a definite diagnosis, revealed macrophages phagocytosing haematopoietic cells. Immunosuppressive therapy with corticosteroids and cyclosporine was an effective treatment in this patient.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22607519 PMCID: PMC3473307 DOI: 10.1186/1710-1492-8-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol ISSN: 1710-1484 Impact factor: 3.406
Figure 1Aspects of the pseudoinflammatory tumour of the lung in the patient. ( A) A chest radiography revealed a mass in projection of the upper left lung lobe. ( B) A computed tomography of the lung revealed a mass in the left lobe of the lung in contact with the thoracic spine. ( C- D) Histological analysis revealed the diagnosis of a pseudoinflammatory tumour, with the characteristic spindle-like cell structure of fibroblasts.
Figure 2Routine and immunohistochemical stainings of biopsies from cubital veins and bone marrow. ( A- B) Biopsies of cubital veins showed complete loss of normal vein architecture with massive infiltration of lymphocytes (arrows in A), histiocytes (arrows in B), macrophages and fibroblasts. ( C- D) Further immunohistochemical analysis revealed massively increased numbers of proliferating Ki-67+/CD68+ macrophages (arrows in C and D). ( E- G) Bone marrow biopsies of the patient revealed haemophagocytosis, the defining criterion of MAS. Characteristically, the histiocytes showed degenerated and nucleated proerythoblasts within their cytoplasm (arrows E- G).
Figure 3Flow cytometric analysis of bone-marrow cells and morphology of antigen-presenting cells (APC) from long-term-cultures. ( A) NKT (CD3+/CD56+ cells) were no longer present in the bone marrow of the patient. (B- C) Images show Giemsa-stained cytospin preparations of 28-day-cultured haemophagocytes with characteristic autophagy vacuoles and inclusion bodies containing undigested phagocytozed material (arrows). ( D- I) Further FACS analysis revealed a high expression of CD63 on all BMCs and also an increased expression of CD11b on granulocytes.
Laboratory Values
| Haematocrit (%) | 0,25 | 0,34 | 0,43 | 0.4–0.54 |
| White-cell count (10^6/l) | 15,10 | 13,10 | 11,9 | 4.3–10.0 |
| Platelet count (10^6/l) | 587 | 519 | 235 | 150–350 |
| Ferritin (μg/l) | 1043 | 230 | 204 | 30–400 |
| Triglycerides (mg/dl) | 68 | 127 | 208 | < 200 |
| IL2R (kU/l) | > 7200 | 2000 | 690 | 223–710 |
| IL6 (ng/l) | 1500 | 250 | n.d. | < 7 |
| CRP (mg/l) | >230 + | 53 | 10 | < 5 |
| PCHE (U/l) | 918 | 3218 | 9495 | 5320–12920 |
| Prothombin time (INR) | | | | 0.8–1.1 |
| Fibrinogen (g/l) | 4,8 | n.d. | n.d. | 2.0–4.5 |
Diagnostic criteria for HLH*
| Manifestations in the patient described quotidian fever over several weeks | |
|---|---|
| hepatosplenomegaly | |
| (3) Cytopenia involving two or more cell lines | haemoglobin < 9.0 d/dL, no other |
| (4) Hypertriglyceridaemia or hypofibrinogenaemia | no |
| yes | |
| yes | |
| yes | |
| 1043 μg/L | |
| > 7200 U/ml |
*according to HLH-2004 criteria (Henter JI et al.).