Fanconi anemia differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions
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| style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" |infections including bacterial and fungal in cases of severe neutropenia | | style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" |infections including bacterial and fungal in cases of severe neutropenia | ||
| style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" | | | style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" | | ||
| style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" | | | style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" |especially pallor and petechiae. | ||
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Revision as of 14:11, 23 June 2018
Fanconi anemia Microchapters |
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Fanconi anemia differential diagnosis On the Web |
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
Overview
[Disease name] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], [clinical feature 2], and [clinical feature 3], such as [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].
OR
[Disease name] must be differentiated from [[differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].
Differentiating X from other Diseases
- [Disease name] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], [clinical feature 2], and [clinical feature 3], such as [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].
- [Disease name] must be differentiated from [differential dx1], [differential dx2], and [differential dx3].
- As [disease name] manifests in a variety of clinical forms, differentiation must be established in accordance with the particular subtype. [Subtype name 1] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 1], such as [differential dx1] and [differential dx2]. In contrast, [subtype name 2] must be differentiated from other diseases that cause [clinical feature 2], such as [differential dx3] and [differential dx4].
Preferred Table
Diseases | Clinical manifestations | Para-clinical findings | Gold standard | Additional findings | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Symptoms | Physical examination | ||||||||||||||
Lab Findings | Imaging | Histopathology | |||||||||||||
Symptom 1 | Symptom 2 | Symptom 3 | Physical exam 1 | Physical exam 2 | Physical exam 3 | Lab 1 | Lab 2 | Lab 3 | Imaging 1 | Imaging 2 | Imaging 3 | ||||
Fanconi Anemia | Skin – Generalized hyperpigmentation; hypopigmented areas; large freckles, café-au-lait spots | Short stature, delicate features, upper limbs absent or hypoplastic thumbs, supernumerary, bifid clinodactyly | Head – Microcephaly or hydrocephaly; birdlike face, mid-face hypoplasia, Sprengel's deformity of neck,
Eyes- Microphthalmia, ptosis, epicanthal folds, strabismus |
Cytopenia, Bone marrow failure | Gastrointestinal anomalies – Atresias, imperforate anus, tracheoesophageal fistula, malrotation,
Kidney – Abnormal, ectopic, horseshoe, hypoplastic, or absent kidney; hydronephrosis |
Cardiopulmonary anomalies – Congenital heart disease (patent ductus arteriosus, atrial or ventricular septal defects, coarctation, situs inversus) | FA gene sequencing | Incrreased chromosomal breakage in response to mitomycin C or diepoxybutane (quite sensitive but not entirely specific) | |||||||
Acquired Aplastic Anemia | recurrent infections due to neutropenia, mucosal hemorrhage or menorrhagia due to thrombocytopenia, or fatigue and cardiopulmonary findings associated with progressive anemia. | infections including bacterial and fungal in cases of severe neutropenia | especially pallor and petechiae. | Bone marrow aspiration and Biopsy= hypocellular bone marrow in the absence of an abnormal infiltrate or marrow fibrosis. | typically a more rapid onset and progression of cytopenias; and a response to immunosuppressive therapy | ||||||||||
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) | Fatigue
●Dyspnea ●Hemoglobinuria |
Abdominal pain
●Bone marrow suppression ●Erectile dysfunction |
Chest pain
●Thrombosis ●Renal insufficiency |
Anemia
●Increased reticulocyte count ●Increased lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and bilirubin ●Decreased haptoglobin ●Free serum hemoglobin with pink/red serum Bone Marrow: PNH usually have a normocellular or hypercellular bone marrow with erythroid hyperplasia. Stainable iron is often absent |
hemolytic anemia (indirect hyperbiliribinemia) |
●Hemoglobinuria with pink/red urine, positive dipstick for heme, and negative sediment for red blood cells ●Negative direct antiglobulin (Coombs) test (DAT) ●Hypocellular, normocellular or hypercellular bone marrow, often with erythroid hyperplasia; erythroid dysplasia is not uncommon ●Findings of iron deficiency may be seen in some patients due to excessive iron loss from hemoglobinuria and hemosiderinuria (eg, low iron, low ferritin, increased transferrin, absent bone marrow iron |
FLAER: Flow cytometry detect (GPI) anchored proteins, which are reduced or absent on blood cells in PNH.
Acquired mutations in the PIGA gene result in the dominance of a hematopoietic progenitor cell clone lacking glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors |
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Other inherited bone marrow failure syndromes | |||||||||||||||
Diseases | Symptom 1 | Symptom 2 | Symptom 3 | Physical exam 1 | Physical exam 2 | Physical exam 3 | Lab 1 | Lab 2 | Lab 3 | Imaging 1 | Imaging 2 | Imaging 3 | Histopathology | Gold standard | Additional findings |
Drug-induced or infection-associated pancytopenia | |||||||||||||||
Rare chromosomal breakage syndromes | |||||||||||||||
De novo myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) |