| Literature DB >> 25383229 |
Benjamin Smith1, Matthew B Carroll1.
Abstract
A 28-year-old healthy female presented to her primary care physician with lymphadenopathy, fatigue, malaise, and night sweats. Symptoms persisted despite conservative treatment and eventually the patient underwent multiple lymph node resections and a bone marrow biopsy before a diagnosis of IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) was made. IgG4-RD is a relatively new disorder first histopathologically recognized within the last decade. As the disease can affect a single organ or multiple organs, symptoms can vary greatly among patients. With symptoms ranging from mild, such as lower extremity edema, to severe, such as spinal cord compression, IgG4-RD must be considered in appropriate patients. Diagnostic criteria have been proposed based on organ involvement, serum IgG4 levels, and histopathological criteria. Diagnosis can be difficult to make with many studies suggesting different values for diagnostic criteria, such as the level of tissue IgG4+/IgG+ cell ratio to delineate IgG4-RD. Treatment consists of high dose glucocorticoids as a first line therapy with some patients choosing instead to simply undergo observation. This case illustrates the difficulty in diagnosis and the need for increased awareness among medical professionals.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 25383229 PMCID: PMC4207595 DOI: 10.1155/2012/158208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Reports Immunol ISSN: 2090-6617
Figure 1CT neck with contrast revealed diffuse cervical adenopathy (arrows demonstrate lymphadenopathy).
Figure 2Hematoxylin and eosin stain of a resected lymph node, 2x magnification. This preparation shows nonspecific reactive follicular hyperplasia (arrow demonstrates secondary follicle with prominent germinal center).
Differential diagnosis with pertinent laboratory findings*.
| Lymphoma | Bone marrow and lymph node biopsy performed HTLV-1+2 antibodies (nonreactive) |
| Castleman's disease | HHV-8 lymph node stains negative |
| Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative syndrome | Less than 1.5% double negative (CD4−CD8−) T-cell count on cytometry |
| Mycobacterial infection | AFB culture of lymph node (negative) |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | ANA panel (1 : 160) |
| Anti-dsDNA and anti-Sm antibodies (negative) | |
| Complement levels C3, C4 within normal range | |
| Viral infections | EBV (nuclear Ag IgG positive, viral capsid IgG positive, viral capsid IgM negative), |
| CMV (IgM negative, IgG negative), parvovirus B19 (IgM negative, IgG negative), | |
| Hepatitis (HBs Ag negative, HBc Ab negative, HBs Ab negative, HCV Ab negative) | |
| Cat scratch disease | Bartonella panel (negative) |
| Sjögren's syndrome | SSA/SSB (negative) |
∗HTLV-1+2: human T-lymphotropic virus type I and II, HHV-8: human herpes virus 8; AFB: acid-fast bacilli, ANA: antinuclear antibodies, Anti-dsDNA: antidouble-stranded DNA, Anti-Sm: anti-Smith; EBV = Epstein-Barr virus, CMV: cytomegalovirus, HBs Ag = hepatitis B surface antigen, and HBc Ab: hepatitis B core antibody IgG, HBs Ab = hepatitis B surface antibody, HCV Ab: hepatitis C virus antibody, SSA: anti-Ro/SSA antibodies, and SSB: anti-La/SSB antibodies.
Figure 3IgG (a) and IgG4 (b) stains, 4x magnification. These stains show an IgG4+/IgG+ cell ratio estimated at 30% (black arrow head: IgG staining, solid black arrow = IgG4 staining).
Proposed comprehensive diagnostic criteria for IgG4-RD*.
| (1) Organ enlargement, mass or nodular lesions, or organ dysfunction | |
| (2) A serum IgG4 concentration >135 mg/dL | |
| (3) Histopathological findings of >10 IgG4 cells/high powered field and an IgG4+/IgG+ cell ratio >40% | |
| Definite = (1), Possible = (1) + (2), Probable = (1) + (3) |
*Adapted from Umehara et al. [2].
Specificity and sensitivity of IgG4+/IgG+ cell ratio for diagnosis of IgG4-RD*.
| IgG4+/IgG+ Cell ratio | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|---|---|---|
| >30% | 100% | 71.4% |
| >40% | 94.4% | 85.7% |
| >50% | 94.4% | 95.2% |
*Adapted from Masaki et al. [4].