Clinical, radiological and pathological features of ABCA3 mutations in children

ML Doan, RP Guillerman, MK Dishop, LM Nogee… - Thorax, 2008 - thorax.bmj.com
ML Doan, RP Guillerman, MK Dishop, LM Nogee, C Langston, GB Mallory, MM Sockrider…
Thorax, 2008thorax.bmj.com
Background: Mutations in the ABCA3 gene can result in fatal surfactant deficiency in term
newborn infants and chronic interstitial lung disease in older children. Previous studies on
ABCA3 mutations have focused primarily on the genetic abnormalities and reported limited
clinical information about the resultant disease. A study was undertaken to analyse
systematically the clinical presentation, pulmonary function, diagnostic imaging, pathological
features and outcomes of children with ABCA3 mutations. Methods: The records of nine …
Background
Mutations in the ABCA3 gene can result in fatal surfactant deficiency in term newborn infants and chronic interstitial lung disease in older children. Previous studies on ABCA3 mutations have focused primarily on the genetic abnormalities and reported limited clinical information about the resultant disease. A study was undertaken to analyse systematically the clinical presentation, pulmonary function, diagnostic imaging, pathological features and outcomes of children with ABCA3 mutations.
Methods
The records of nine children with ABCA3 mutations evaluated at Texas Children’s Hospital between 1992 and 2005 were reviewed and their current clinical status updated. Previous diagnostic imaging studies and lung biopsy specimens were re-examined. The results of DNA analyses were confirmed.
Results
Age at symptom onset ranged from birth to 4 years. Cough, crackles, failure to thrive and clubbing were frequent findings. Mean lung function was low but tended to remain static. CT scans commonly revealed ground-glass opacification, septal thickening, parenchymal cysts and pectus excavatum. Histopathological patterns included pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, desquamative interstitial pneumonitis and non-specific interstitial pneumonitis, and varied with age. Dense abnormalities of lamellar bodies, characteristic of ABCA3 mutations, were seen by electron microscopy in all adequate specimens. Outcomes varied with the age at which the severity of lung disease warranted open lung biopsy, and some patients have had prolonged survival without lung transplantation.
Conclusions
The presentation and course of interstitial lung disease due to ABCA3 mutations are variable, and open lung biopsy and genetic testing are warranted early in the evaluation of children with a consistent clinical picture.
thorax.bmj.com