| Literature DB >> 33330270 |
Aleksandra Szczawińska-Popłonyk1, Lidia Ossowska1, Katarzyna Jończyk-Potoczna2.
Abstract
Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by neurodegeneration, combined immunodeficiency, and oculocutaneous telangiectasia. The hyper-IgM phenotype of A-T, correlating with a class-switch recombination defect, IgG and IgA deficiency, T helper and B cell lymphopenia, immune dysregulation, proinflammatory immune response, autoimmune disease, and a high risk of lymphomagenesis. Progressive liver disease is a hallmark of classical A-T with the hyper-IgM phenotype and manifests as non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis and fibrosis. We report a case of a 17-year-old male A-T patient, in whom a progressive granulomatous liver disease with portal hypertension, has led to massive splenomegaly and hypersplenism, metabolic liver insufficiency, bleeding from esophageal varices and pancytopenia. In this patient, an unusual severe disease course with a highly variable constellation of A-T symptomatology includes granulomatous skin, visceral, and internal organs disease with liver involvement. The liver disease is associated with the hyper-IgM immunophenotype and escalating neurodegeneration, creating a vicious circle of immune deficiency, permanent systemic inflammatory response, and organ-specific immunopathology.Entities:
Keywords: children; granulomatous liver disease; hyper-IgM phenotype; hypersplenism; primary immunodeficiency
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330270 PMCID: PMC7711070 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2020.570330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Timeline. Graphic display of the clinical course of the disease, complications, and the treatment used in the A–T patient with systemic granulomatosis.
Laboratory workup of the patient (aged 17).
| WBC 2.41 × 103, RBC 3.36 × 106, MCV 89.0 fl, PLT 105 × 103, lymphocytes 21.2% (510 cc/mcL), neutrophils 63.1% (1,520 cc/mcL) |
| APTT 51.7 s (25.9–36.6 s), prothrombin index 72.4% (80.0–120.0%), INR 1.37 (0.85–1.25), AT 54% (75.0–125.0%) |
| CRP 0.22 mg/dL (<0.50 mg/dL), D-dimer 5.08 mg/L (<0.55) |
| Protein 4.57 g/dL (5.7–8.0 g/dL), Albumin 2,815 mg/dL (3,500–5,200 mg/dL) |
| Fibrinogen 124 mg/dL (180–350 mg/dL) |
| GOT 11 IU/L (<50 IU/L), GPT 30 IU/L (<50 IU/L), γGT 251 IU/L (2–42 IU/L) |
| LDH 214 IU/L (<248 IU/l) |
| Ferritin 115 mcg/L (15–250 mcg/L) |
| AFP 129.7 ng/mL (<7 ng/mL), CEA 0.75 ng/mL (<5.0 ng/mL) |
| • Immunoglobulins |
| • Peripheral blood (PB) leukocyte immunophenotype |
| WBC 1,540 cc, lymphocytes CD45+/SSC low 20.0%, 305 cc (29–46%, 1,200–4,100 cc), B CD19+ 1.0%, 2 cc (7–22%, 100–820 cc), T CD3+ 77.0%, 264 cc (50–91%, 780–3,000 cc) |
| T helper CD3+CD4+ 52.0%, 176 cc (28–64%, 500–2,000 cc), T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+ 19.0%, 65 cc (12–40%, 200–1,200 cc) CD4+/CD8+ 2.68 |
| NK CD3–CD45+CD16+CD56+ 10.0%, 35 cc (5–49%, 100–1,200 cc) |
| Recent thymic emigrants CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD31+: 1.1%, 2 cc (7–90%, 50–2,400 cc) |
| Naïve T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD27+ 0.7%, 1 cc (16–90%, 100–2,300 cc) |
| Central memory T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA–CD27+ 40.5%, 71 cc (18–95%, 180–1,100 cc) |
| Effector memory T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA–CD27– 58.5%, 103 cc (1–23%, 13–220 cc) |
| Terminally differentiated memory T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RA+CD27– 0.2%, 0 cc (0–7%, 0.0–0.7 cc) |
| Follicular CXCR5+ T helper CD3+CD4+CD45RO+CD185+ 4.7%, 8 cc (5–56%, 24–190 cc) |
| Regulatory T helper CD3+CD4+CD25++CD127– 3.2%, 6 cc (4–17%, 25–180 cc) |
| Naïve T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD27+CD197+ 41.8%, 27 cc (6–90%, 16–1,000 cc) |
| Central memory T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD45RA–CD27+CD197+ 10.4%, 7 cc (1–20%, 4–120 cc) |
| Effector memory T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD45RA–CD27–CD197– 6.9%, 5 cc (14–98%, 40–640 cc) |
| Terminally differentiated T suppressor/cytotoxic CD3+CD8+CD45RA+CD27–CD197– 5.0%, 3 cc (7–53%, 25–280 cc) |
| Comment: lymphopenia, almost total lack of B cells, low T CD4+ and CD8+ cells, almost total lack of naïve T helper cells and recent thymic emigrants, with predominance of T helper effector cells, low effector and terminally differentiated T suppressor/cytotoxic cells |
| • EBV-DNA 135 copies/mL, HBV, HCV, CMV RT-PCR in PB negative |
| • VZV, |
| • |
| • Tracheal aspirate culture: negative |
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| • HIV-RNA negative |
| • Galactomannan ( |
| • Bone marrow aspiration: normal cellularity; no features of malignant transformation; cytogenetics: deletions (5q–, 7q–, and 20q–) not found |
| • Skin biopsy: atypical granuloma annulare |
| • Biopsy of the larynx: infiltrations with reactive T CD8+ lymphocytes and CD68+ histiocytes, CD4+:CD8+ ratio < <1; 30% cells express Ki67; TdT, CD34, CALLA, CD1a, LMP EBV, CD30 TNFRSF8, and MPO not detected |
Figure 2Magnetic resonance imaging of the abdominal cavity. Markedly enlarged spleen (19.1 × 8.2 cm) with irregular, nodular reconstruction, with hypointense foci in T1 and T2 dependent images, 5–60 mm large, modeling on vessels, and signal loss flow void foci in the central part of the spleen. The liver enlarged, the right lobe 18 cm, left lobe 14 cm, both lobes showing irregular nodular reconstruction, in T1 image hyperintense, in T2 image hypointense. All images show different phases of one MRI examination in the patient aged 17. (A) Transverse view, T1-weighted gradient-echo HASTE (Turbo spin-echo) sequence, oppose-phase imaging. (B) Transverse view, 3D starVIBE T1-weighted gradient-echo sequence FS (fat-suppressed), contrast protocol. (C) Transverse view, T2 image with SPC pulse sequence. (D) Coronal view, T2 image HASTE FS sequence.