[CIS PIDD] [cis-pidd] infections, rash, failure to thrive, recurrent hyperosmolar dehydration

Keller, Michael D KellerMD at email.chop.edu
Sat Jan 19 21:14:52 EST 2013


Dear Eli:

MyD88 / IRAK4 might be another consideration. Many but not all will lack fever.

Mike
________________________________________
From: Seppänen Mikko [Mikko.Seppanen at hus.fi]
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2013 4:09 AM
To: CIS-PIDD
Subject: VS: [cis-pidd] infections, rash, failure to thrive, recurrent hyperosmolar dehydration

Dear Eli,

atrichia+, how about nail atrophy???

Consanguinity+, You might need to think of the whole EDA-ID complex i.e. besides NEMO also IKBA, CHH (short stature takes 9 months to 2 years to be recognizable)is a possibility like mentioned, since bamboo hair may break underneath the scalp even Netherton/SPINK5 springs to mind (the ID may be severe when very young).

As You know, NBS/Nijmegen Breakage may have sparse hair, results do not fit the described WHN SCID patients who have atrichia.

Yet, congenital heart defect + atrichia + PIDD + neonatal rash - all together ???

No concomitant CHARGE association????
I would thus also perform , (besides exome seq) also/first karyotype and comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), some obscure microdeletion including some of the above-mentioned genes for example??
Intriguing, let us know if You find the cause(s)? Hope this helps,

mikko seppänen, Finland

-----Alkuperäinen viesti-----
Lähettäjä: Eli Eisenstein [mailto:emeisenstein at gmail.com]
Lähetetty: 17. tammikuuta 2013 16:02
Vastaanottaja: CIS-PIDD
Aihe: [cis-pidd] infections, rash, failure to thrive, recurrent hyperosmolar dehydration

Hello to all,

We are seeking help concerning a 4.5 month old Palestinian Arab infant, parents first cousins. Two sibs have mild non-ketotic hypergyceinemia, the patient does not.

Clinical phenotype

Recurrent invasive bacterial infections beginning during the first weeks of life:
MRSA bacteremia
Peri-anal abscess (Pseudomonas, enterobacter) Pneumonia, Burkhoderia cepacia cultured from purulent BAL. There is some question as to whether this organism was a contaminant, as it was identified in BAL fluid from other patients around the same time.

Diffuse seborrheic derm, steroid responsive, atrichia

Failure to thrive with loose stools. Three acute bouts of gastroenteritis with fever resulting in severe hyperosmolar dehydration within hours.

In addition congenital heart disease- huge ASD with L-àR shunt and pulmonary hypertension.


Immune workup thus far:

Thymus radiographically present

IgM- 1310, IgA-126, IgG-1310

Immunophenotype
CD2 4220
CD3 3720
CD4 2290
CD8- 1430
CD3 CD45RA- 5580
CD3CD45RO- 620
CD19 1364
CD20 1300
CD18 99%+
HLADR 1612
CD56+16 1180

Normal lymphocyte proliferative responses to lectin mitogens,
antigen/IL2 stim not done.

Limited colonoscopy- no IBD
Endoscopy- macroscopic duodenitis, microscopy non-specific



Additional studies graciously performed by our colleagues at other centers in Israel include the following:

DHR- normal. Normal PMN morphology and chemotaxis.

TREC quantitative – 754 copies/0.5 mcg DNA (normal for lab >400)

CD25, FoxP3 staining comparable to control. Normal glucose. TSH moderately elevated, autoantibody studies negative. IgE 16, 100 two months later.

Staining of 24 TCRVb families showed significant skewing. In particular among CD3CD8+ cells several Vb were not represented, 40% of cells Vb23+.

Evaluation by FISH and STR negative for materno-fetal engraftment


In short, this child appears to have some form of PID but we do not feel we have immunologic proof. We are considering WES. Other suggestions appreciated.

Thanks

Eli Eisenstein
Hadassah
Israel

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