| Literature DB >> 35128312 |
Arooj Fatima Chaudhry1, Zulfiqar Malik2, Cameron Joseph Shegos1.
Abstract
The coexistence of alpha- and beta-thalassemia is not uncommon and neither is a single thalassemia subtype with a hemochromatosis H63D mutation, however the inheritance of all three diseases together has yet to be reported. We present this rare case of co-inherited alpha-thalassemia minor and beta-thalassemia minor initially misdiagnosed as iron deficiency anemia (IDA) in a reproductive aged female with a heterozygous H63D mutation. In our case report, a 27-year-old, Asian female presented with excessive lethargy and fatigue for the past 10 months. A year ago, she was prescribed Ferrous Sulfate 325 mg daily supplementation due to a suspicion of IDA secondary to a history of heavy menstruations. Although her reports displayed a low mean corpuscular volume (MCV) anemia, the patient declined therapy at that time due to abnormal labs, specifically regarding her urine and liver that subsequently lead to a hemochromatosis, heterozygous H63D diagnosis following genetic testing. Subsequently, the patient's anemia presenting in the setting of normal ferritin, high iron saturation, and elevated A2 fraction was most likely in accordance to carrying the alpha-thalassemia minor, beta-thalassemia minor, and heterozygous H63D gene mutations. Genetic testing further clarified two of the four alpha-globin genes were deleted, alpha3.7 and alpha4.2, consistent with alpha-thalassemia trait and a heterozygous, frameshift mutation of c.27dupG on the hemoglobin subunit beta (HBB) gene associated with beta-thalassemia minor. The initial diagnosis of IDA was inaccurate following the iron studies displaying normal ferritin levels. This is the first report of combined alpha- and beta-thalassemia with a hemochromatosis H63D mutation. Although the clinical presentation of our patient and laboratory values are stable, the course of inheriting all three diseases together is unknown and may inflate the risk of future complications beyond reported studies. Frequent monitorization of hemoglobin and iron studies will be conducted to follow this rare presentation and prevent life-threating iron overload. 2022 AME Case Reports. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Case report; alpha-thalassemia minor; beta-thalassemia major; hemochromatosis; iron overload
Year: 2022 PMID: 35128312 PMCID: PMC8762380 DOI: 10.21037/acr-21-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AME Case Rep ISSN: 2523-1995