Literature DB >> 32893754

IgG4 plasma cell myeloma without clinical evidence of IgG4-related disease: a report of two cases.

Deonne Thaddeus V Gauiran1,2, Krista M Marcon3,4, Mari L DeMarco4,5, Angela W S Fung4,5, Grace van der Gugten5, Andre Mattman4,5, Mollie N Carruthers6, Kevin W Song2, Luke Y C Chen2.   

Abstract

Background: Serum IgG4 is typically measured to investigate for Immunoglobulin G4-related Disease (IgG4-RD), a fibroinflammatory condition associated with polyclonal increase in serum IgG4. However, increased IgG4 can also be monoclonal, and little is known about IgG4 myeloma.
Methods: We describe two cases of IgG4 myeloma without clinical, radiologic, or laboratory features of IgG4-related disease.
Results: An 84 year old man presented with anemia and compression fractures and a 77 year old man presented with anemia, hypercalcemia and renal failure. Both had markedly elevated monoclonal serum IgG4, 34 g/L and 48 g/L in the beta region, and increased IgG positive bone marrow plasma cells, 50% and 80%, respectively. Neither had clinical or radiological manifestations of IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) such as salivary or lacrimal gland swelling, autoimmune pancreatitis , or retroperitoneal fibrosis. Both cases responded well to standard myeloma therapy. The IgG4 paraprotein caused spuriously elevated beta-2 microglobulin of 45.2 mg/L in case two due to interference with the assay.
Conclusion: These cases illustrate the importance of performing serum protein electrophoresis in tandem with IgG subclasses to distinguish between polyclonal and monoclonal increases in serum IgG4. The lack of typical IgG4-RD features in these two patients suggests that monoclonal elevation in serum IgG4 alone is insufficient to cause the organ damage characteristic of IgG4-RD. Larger studies of IgG myeloma subtypes are warranted to explore whether IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4 myeloma differ in natural history and whether the interference with beta-2 microglobulin is specific to IgG4 monoclonal proteins.

Entities:  

Keywords:  IgG4-related disease; Plasma cells; beta-2 microglobulin; monoclonal IgG4; myeloma

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32893754     DOI: 10.1080/16078454.2020.1815130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hematology        ISSN: 1024-5332            Impact factor:   2.269


  2 in total

Review 1.  Immune Dysregulation in IgG4-Related Disease.

Authors:  Jiachen Liu; Wei Yin; Lisa S Westerberg; Pamela Lee; Quan Gong; Yan Chen; Lingli Dong; Chaohong Liu
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-09-01       Impact factor: 7.561

Review 2.  Active IgG4-related disease with bone marrow involvement: a report of 2 cases and case-based review.

Authors:  Shiyi Liu; Hui Wang; Tao Su
Journal:  Eur J Med Res       Date:  2022-02-02       Impact factor: 2.175

  2 in total

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