| Literature DB >> 31788408 |
Dina Khalaf1, Heather Bell2, David Dale3, Vikas Gupta1, Hanna Faghfoury2, Chantal F Morel1,2, Anne Tierens4, David A Weinstein5, Jiong Yan4, Santhosh Thyagu1, Dawn Maze1.
Abstract
Congenital neutropenias due to mutations in ELANE, SBDS or HAX1 or in the setting of glycogen storage disease (GSD) which is caused by SLC37A4 mutation, often require prolonged granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) therapy to prevent recurrent infections and hospital admission. There has been emerging evidence that prolonged exposure to G-CSF in cases with congenital neutropenia other than GSD is associated with transformation to myelodysplastic syndrome/acute myeloid leukemia.Entities:
Keywords: G‐CSF; acute myeloid leukemia; congenital neutropenia; cornstarch; glycogen storage disease; granulocytic sarcoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31788408 PMCID: PMC6875697 DOI: 10.1002/jmd2.12069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JIMD Rep ISSN: 2192-8304
Case reports
| Reference number | Relevance to our case |
|---|---|
| 11 | The first reported case that has described the association between GSD, and AML, however, prior to G‐SCF era |
| 12 | The first reported case of a young woman with GSD who was treated with G‐CSF therapy who developed AML |
| 14 | Here the young patient with GSD who was on G‐CSF therapy had AML with abnormal karyotype. In this case they described monosomy 7 as an associated abnormal karyotype |
| 13 | This was the third reported case that highlighted the link between G‐CSF therapy in patients with GSD and AML |
| 15 | The authors of this article have linked telomere shortening with AML in patients with GSD receiving G‐CSF in face of the associated neutropenia |
Figure 1Bone marrow aspiration showing on the left (A) myeloblasts and dysgranulopoiesis; and on the right (B) showing a myeloblast with auer rod
Reference guide for dietary and metabolic management of GSD
| THE PATIENT CANNOT FAST: PLEASE PLACE A SIGN OVER BED | ||||||||||||||
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On admission: CBC, glucose, electrolytes (sodium, potassium, bicarbonate, chloride), urea, creatinine, serum lactate, uric acid, AST, ALT, triglycerides, and cholesterol. Daily: glucose, electrolytes, AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, and lactate. Weekly: CBC, uric acid, cholesterol and triglycerides. | ||||||||||||||
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Usual diet order: No added sugar, low lactose, plus preferences. Ensure early breakfast tray ordered and all meals in room at scheduled times. 3 meals and 2 snacks with cornstarch daily, these must be taken every 2–3 h to avoid severe hypoglycaemia. Patient's family to be allowed to bring snacks from home as well as cornstarch supply. If the patient is unable to take nocturnal feeds or cornstarch, then run D10W with 0.45% NS at 110 mL/h overnight. Once the patient has eaten breakfast the next morning and tolerated 8 | ||||||||||||||
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If patient is NPO, initiate IV D10W with 0.45% NS and 20 mEq KCl at 110 mL/h. Check IV integrity every 2 h to ensure that IV fluid is still running. Once diet resumes and the patient has eaten a full meal with cornstarch, reduce IV rate to 50 mL/h for 1 h, then change to saline lock. If the patient requires TPN, please contact the TPN Genetic‐Metabolic Team | ||||||||||||||
| ‐ Glucose monitoring: | ||||||||||||||
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| Important notes for team, pharmacy and nursing Try to minimize steroid use as this will cause significant rise in lactate. When necessary, use in lowest dose possible and as short duration as feasible, monitoring blood glucose, lactate and liver function q 4‐6 h rather than daily. Ensure medications are mixed in NS rather than D5 whenever possible to limit extra source of dextrose. Do not administer IV ringer's lactate at any time. Glucagon is to be avoided at all times (does NOT treat hypoglycaemia in GSD). Do not start IV D10W unless the patient is fasting, unable to eat due chemotherapy adverse effects. |
Figure 2CT scans of the chest showing on the left. A, Preinduction myeloid sarcoma shown as a cavitary lesion with surrounding consolidation and ground glass; and on the right. B, A postoperative CT scan of the chest after wedge excision of the remnant lesion postinduction
| Capillary blood glucose (mmol/L) |
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| Less than 2.5 | Give D50W 25 mL IV and recheck every 5 min until blood glucose is above 2.5 mmol/L, then follow instructions below |
| 2.5 to 3.9 | Give 1 glucose tab and recheck in 15 min; repeat if not above 4 mmol/L. When blood glucose level is above 4 mmol/L, give a carbohydrate snack. |
| 4 to 12 | No action required |
| Greater than 12 | NO insulin to be given; inform MD who will assess the route of intake (IV, PO, NG) |
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| Give D50W 25 mL IV and recheck every 5 min until blood glucose above 2.5 mmol/L then follow instructions below |