| Literature DB >> 26241228 |
Sophia R Balderman1, Marshall A Lichtman2.
Abstract
Essential monoclonal gammopathy is usually an asymptomatic condition, the characteristics of which have been defined over approximately 70 years of study. It has a known population-attributable risk of undergoing clonal evolution to a progressive, symptomatic B-cell neoplasm. In a very small fraction of patients, the monoclonal immunoglobulin has biophysical characteristics that can lead to tissue deposition syndrome (e.g. Fanconi renal syndrome) or, by chance, have characteristics of an autoantibody that may inactivate critical proteins (e.g. acquired von Willebrand disease). In this report, we describe the very uncommon forms of ocular injury that may accompany essential monoclonal gammopathy, which include crystalline keratopathy, crystal-storing histiocytosis, hypercupremic keratopathy, and maculopathy. The first three syndromes result from uncommon physicochemical alterations of the monoclonal immunoglobulin that favor crystallization or exaggerated copper binding. The last-mentioned syndrome is of uncertain pathogenesis. These syndromes may result in decreased visual acuity. These ocular findings may lead, also, to the diagnosis of monoclonal gammopathy.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26241228 PMCID: PMC4524399 DOI: 10.5041/RMMJ.10211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rambam Maimonides Med J ISSN: 2076-9172
Figure 1Patient with IgG-kappa Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy
In 1999, a 64-year-old woman presented to the University of Rochester, Department of Ophthalmology, with diminished visual acuity, bilaterally. (A) Ocular examination showed widely dispersed straw-like interlacing deposits in the corneas of both eyes, strongly suggesting crystalline keratopathy. In this frontal view, the irregular dark areas represent more normal corneal light transmission in relatively unaffected areas centrally. Most of the cornea contains a network of apparent crystals forming an interlacing opacity. (B) Slit lamp examination showed the deposits were in the anterior corneal stroma resulting in an arc of opaque white coloration. The patient had no family history of corneal dystrophies. Crystalline keratopathy related to a crystal-forming monoclonal Ig was suspected. Indeed, she had a 0.5 g/dL serum monoclonal immunoglobulin, IgG-kappa, by zonal and immunoelectrophoresis. She has had no findings to indicate a progressive B-cell neoplasm during 16 years of follow-up. She had bilateral penetrating keratoplasty with restoration of visual acuity. (The authors thank Holly B. Hindman, M.D., University of Rochester, Department of Ophthalmology, for providing these images.)
Figure 2Patient with IgG-kappa Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy
Corneal button from a penetrating keratoplasty was prepared for histological examination. This image shows a normal epithelium and anterior and mid–stromal layers. The arrows point to immunoglobulin deposits in the posterior stroma adjacent to Descemet membrane (see Figure 3). (Used from reference 7 with permission of Archives of Ophthalmology.)
Figure 3Patient with IgG-kappa Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy
Corneal button from a penetrating keratoplasty was prepared for histological examination. (A) This image is in the same area as the image in Figure 2 and indicates the deposition of Ig composed of kappa light chains by the immunoperoxidase reaction (brown stain). (B) Transmission electron microscopy uncovered electron-dense extracellular deposits in the same area that exhibited a honeycomb pattern or parallel linear structures with a periodicity of 10–11 nm (original magnification ×27,000). (Used from reference 7 with permission of Archives of Ophthalmology.)
Cases of Ocular Pathology Associated with Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy.
| Citation/Year of Report | Age | Sex (M/F) | Ig Isotype | Other Tissue Involvement | Treatment | Outcome | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12/1959 | 55 | F | IgG (light chain type not determined) | Iritis, conjunctivitis | None at the time of diagnosis | Five years after diagnosis of keratopathy, myeloma developed with crystals in myeloma cells | |
| 7/1979 | 74 | F | IgG-kappa | No | Keratoplasty and cataract extraction | Not reported | Posterior corneal stroma contained parallel structures with periodicity of 10–11 nm |
| 17/1980 | 57 | M | IgG-kappa | Iritis | Not reported | Not reported | History of Hodgkin lymphoma treated with radiation |
| 14/1980 | 39 | F | IgG-kappa | Tearing, photophobia | Not reported | Not reported | IgGk deposits in corneal stroma and Bowman membrane. Electron micrograph showed parallel rod-like structures with periodicity of 10 nm |
| 23/1985 | 65 | F | IgA-kappa | Macular drusen | Not reported | Not reported | Slit lamp examination showed needle-like refractile, coarse crystals in mid-deep corneal stroma, bilaterally |
| 16/1988 | 50 | F | IgG-kappa | Uveitis | Corneal graft and posterior chamber intraocular lens insertion | Recurrence of crystalline keratopathy by 4 months | TEM revealed paracrystals with periodicity of 16 nm |
| 25/1989 | 60 | M | IgG-kappa (essential cryo-immunoglobulin) | No | Superficial keratectomy | Improved visual acuity | Crystallization at the corneal subepithelium in this case thought to be related to that site being the coldest in the body (~32°C) |
| 28/1993 | 62 | F | IgG-kappa | No | Not reported | Not reported | Crystal deposits by TEM were all extracellular, located between keratocytes |
| 28/1993 | 65 | M | IgG-kappa | No | Not reported | Not reported | Majority of crystals by TEM were intracellular in stromal keratocytes |
| 29/1994 | 62 | M | IgG-kappa | No | Penetrating keratoplasty | Not reported | IgGk deposits in cornea; TEM showed intracytoplasmic Ig in keratocytes with 10 nm periodicity |
| 20/1996 | 52 | F | IgG-kappa | Photophobia and foreign body sensation | Not reported | Not reported | TEM of corneal biopsy found extracellular rectangular and arcuate crystalloids with 10 nm periodicity |
| 19/1999 | 55 | F | IgG-kappa | No | Penetrating keratoplasty, open-sky extracapsular cataract extraction, posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation | Not reported | Decreasing visual acuity led to diagnosis crystalline keratopathy and, subsequently, of IgG-kappa essential monoclonal gammopathy. IgG-kappa-positive deposits in corneal button removed at keratoplasty; TEM showed numerous bundles of electron dense deposits of filaments with a periodicity of 10–13 nm in the anterior stroma of the cornea. Some deposits were phagocytosed by keratocytes |
| 18/2011 | 62 | F | IgG-kappa | No | Three penetrating keratoplasty surgeries, right-sided: at diagnosis, then 9 years and 12 years later for recurrent loss of visual acuity in the right eye | Improvement for several months post-keratoplasty followed by gradual decrease in visual acuity over years | Left eye affected but to a lesser degree than right eye; no follow-up reported after 3rd keratoplasty |
| 35/1990 | 64 | F | IgA-kappa | No | Not described | Not described | Slit lamp exam revealed bilateral superficial corneal and conjunctival crystals. Diagnosed by conjunctival biopsy |
| 10/1993 | 62 | F | IgG-kappa | Crystalline keratopathy | 4 cycles of bortezomib-based chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplantation | 18 months following autologous stem cell transplantation, patient in complete hematologic, renal, and ophthalmologic remission | Melphalan conditioning for auto-transplant. At 3 months post-transplant, orbital mass had significantly decreased, Fanconi syndrome resolved, and there was no detectable paraproteinemia |
| 34/2009 | 66 | M | IgG-lambda | Crystalline keratopathy | Not described | Not described | Right-sided keratoplasty for crystalline keratopathy 1 year prior to diagnosis of CSH. MRI revealed enhancement of retrobulbar fat and thickening of extraocular muscles; biopsy revealed CSH |
| 42/1967 | 69 | F | IgG | No | Not described | Not described | Myeloma diagnosed 1 year after slit lamp findings of greenish-blue granular discoloration of corneal epithelium and Descemet membrane. Serum copper 13 to 24 × values found in 11 other unaffected myeloma patients tested. Serum ceruloplasmin was normal. Mild increase in urinary copper |
| 44/1975 | 41 | F | IgG-lambda | No | Not described | Not described | 3 years before diagnosis of myeloma, patient had diagnosis of “cataracts” despite 20/20 vision. Soon thereafter cornea found to have dense brown staining reminiscent of Kayser–Fleischer type corneal rings. Serum copper 7 to 11 × normal serum value. Serum ceruloplasmin normal |
| 39/1983 | 60 | M | IgG-lambda | Not reported | Intracapsular cataract extraction and insertion of Binkhorst four-loop lens | Not reported | Concurrent diagnosis of lung carcinoma. Received radiation to lung. Slit lamp examination showed diffuse greenish-yellow discoloration of cornea. Serum copper 7 × normal serum value. Serum ceruloplasmin normal |
| 41/1996 | 65 | M | IgG-kappa | Copper depositions in anterior and posterior lens surface and appearance of sunflower cataract | Zinc gluconate | No change in serum copper | Bilateral blurred vision. Slit lamp examination revealed golden-brown deposits diffusely distributed centrally in cornea. Serum copper 12 × normal serum value. Serum ceruloplasmin normal. Special studies showed binding of copper to serum monoclonal IgG by two methods |
| 40/2005 | 49 | F | IgG-lambda | No | No | N/a | Patient asymptomatic. Slit lamp examination showed golden-brown metallic dust-like particles in Descemet membrane bilaterally. Serum copper 3 × normal. Serum ceruloplasmin normal |
| 38/2014 | 46 | F | IgG-lambda | No | Descemet-stripping endothelial keratoplasty and cataract extraction with intraocular lens implant of left eye | Complete return of normal visual acuity (20/20) | Posterior layer of both corneas had a confluent tan color with only a narrow rim of clear cornea peripherally. Serum copper 12 × normal. Serum ceruloplasmin normal |
| 47/2013 | 37 | F | Not specified | No | Prednisone with inability to wean until rituximab was initiated | Marked and rapid improvement in inflammation and visual acuity with prednisone but recurrence with taper. Resolution of ocular findings without recurrence at 9 months once rituximab therapy was initiated | Bilateral serous macular detachments, iritis, vitritis. Details of how frequently and at what dose rituximab treatment and maintenance treatment were administered are not provided |
CSH, crystal-storing histiocytosis; F, female; M, male; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; TEM, transmission electron microscopy.
Figure 4Crystal-storing Histiocytosis. Patient with Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy (IgA-kappa Type). Marrow Biopsy Treated with Giemsa Stain
(A) The marrow shows a diffuse infiltrate of histiocytes (larger cells) with crystalloid cytoplasmic inclusions (original magnification ×1,600). (B) Plasma cells were infrequent. In this field two are shown by horizontal arrows. Three histiocytes with cytoplasmic crystals are indicated by the vertical arrows (original magnification ×4,000). (Used from reference 32 with permission of the American Society of Hematology.)
Figure 5Appearance of the Left Cornea in a Patient with Essential Monoclonal Gammopathy (IgG-lambda)
Brownish-green discoloration was evident in Descemet membrane, sparing the peripheral 1–2 mm. The anterior lens capsule is discolored. Light reflection off the anterior lens capsule is evident. The serum copper was 1,773 μg/dL (normal 70–175), and serum ceruloplasmin was normal. (Used from reference 38 with the permission of Elsevier.)