| Literature DB >> 29588856 |
Allen Sanyi1, David L Jaye2, Cecilia B Rosand3, Amanda Box3, Chandrakasan Shanmuganathan4, Edmund K Waller3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: GATA2 deficiency presents with a spectrum of phenotypes including increased susceptibility to viral and bacterial infections, multi-lineage cytopenias, aplastic anemia, leukemic transformation and lymphedema. Allogeneic transplantation is only curative therapy for GATA2 deficiency, but is associated with significant treatment related morbidity and mortality. Given the spectrum of clinical presentation, accurate diagnosis of GATA2 deficiency is necessary to identify patients early in their disease course when allogeneic bone marrow transplantation may be of clinical benefit. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Allogeneic transplant; B-cell deficiency; Bone marrow failure; GATA2 deficiency
Year: 2018 PMID: 29588856 PMCID: PMC5863442 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-018-0127-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Fig. 1Pedigree of the affected family. Arrow indicates the patient of discussion
Complete blood count and differential table at age 22
| Complete Blood Counts and Differential | Values | Reference Range |
|---|---|---|
| White Blood Cell Count | 2.2 × 103/uL | 4 - 10 × 103/uL |
| Red Blood Cell Count | 3.22 × 106/uL | 3.93 – 5.22 × 106/uL |
| Hemoglobin | 11 g/dL | 11.4 - 14.4 g/dL |
| MCV | 100 fL | 79.4 - 94.8 fL |
| MCH | 34.4 pg | 25.6 - 32.2 pg |
| MCHC | 34.3 g/dL | 30.0 - 36.0 g/dL |
| Hematocrit | 31. 8% | 33.3 - 41.4% |
| Platelet Count | 29 × 103/uL | 150 – 400 × 103/uL |
| Neutrophil (Differential) | 25% | 36 - 75% |
| Lymphocyte (Differential) | 68% | 27 - 47% |
| Absolute Neutrophil | 0.14 × 103/uL | 0.91 - 5.5 × 103/uL |
| Absolute Lymphocyte | 1.48 × 103/uL | 0.65 - 3.05 × 103/uL |
| Absolute Monocyte | 0.14 × 103/uL | 0.16 - 0.72 × 103/uL |
Serum immunoglobulin levels
| Dates | IgG (620 – 1400) | IgA (80 – 350) | IgM (45 – 250) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6/12/14 | 1040 mg/dL | 77 mg/dL | 98 mg/dL |
| 6/5/17 | 1120 mg/dL | 65 mg/dL | 70 mg/dL |
Fig. 2Bone marrow biopsy showing increased fat and decreased cellularity with relative paucity of normal B-cells. a H&E (100×). b IHC CD138 (200×), occasional plasmacytoid reactive cells. c IHC CD3 (200×), numerous small immunoreactive cells. d IHC CD20 (200×), scattered small immunoreactive cells
Blood lymphocyte and dendritic cell subsets over time. pDC = plasmacytoid dendritic cell; mDC = myeloid dendritic cell
| Dates | CD3+ | CD4+ | CD8+ | γδ TCR+ T-cells/uL | CD56+ NK cells/uL (45-523) | CD19+ | mDC/uL | pDC/uL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11/2015 | 1364 | 751 | 559 | 39 | 103 | 37 | 0 | 0 |
| 12/2014 | 1436 | 858 | 520 | 41 | 108 | 47 | 0 | 0 |
Fig. 3Flow cytometry of bone marrow and blood showed reduced percentages of B-cells with normal frequencies of T-cells. Top row of panels: bone marrow; middle and bottom row of panels: blood. Left panels: blood and bone marrow samples from patient. Right panels: blood and bone marrow samples from a control patient, 5 years status post an allogeneic bone marrow transplant with normal levels of blood lymphocytes and no graft-versus-host disease. Flow plots show antibodies used for staining leukocytes on the x and y axes; percentages listed in the right upper quadrant of each plot show percentage of leukocytes that were CD19+ B-cells (top two rows) or CD3+ T-cells (bottom row)