Fanconi anemia differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions
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●Cancer | ●Cancer | ||
| | |(DC) and telomere related | ||
disorders, mutations in genes that maintain telomere length in | |||
rapidly dividing cells that lead | |||
to premature cell death, senescence, or genomic instability, which in turn results | |||
in impaired function and cellular homeostasis in many organs and tissues. | |||
| style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" |Reticular dysgenesis | | style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" |Reticular dysgenesis | ||
| style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" | | | style="background: #F5F5F5; padding: 5px;" | |
Revision as of 16:51, 24 June 2018
Fanconi anemia Microchapters |
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
Overview
Fanconi Anemia must be differentiated from Aplastic Anemia, Paraoxysomal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria, and Chromosomal breakage syndrome and Hereditary Bone marrow failure syndrome (Dyskeratosis congenita and other short telomere syndromes).
Differentiating X from other Diseases
- Fanconi Anemia must be differentiated from other diseases that cause Pancytopenia, Congenital anomalies, and associated with malignancy such as Aplastic Anemia, Rare chromosomal breakage syndrome and inherited bone marrow failure.
- As Fanconi Anemia resembles with variety of other diseases that causes pancytopenia.
- Must be differentiated on basis on congenital anomalies and chromosomal breakage test.
Preferred Table
Clinical manifestations | Pathophysiology | Para-clinical findings | Gold standard | Additional findings | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lab Findings | Imaging | Histopathology | ||||||
Disease | Symptom | Physical exam | Blood profile | Anamalies | ||||
Fanconi Anemia | Short stature, delicate features, upper limbs absent or hypoplastic thumbs, supernumerary, bifid clinodactyly
infection, petechia, pallor |
Skin – Generalized hyperpigmentation; hypopigmented areas; large freckles, café-au-lait spots
Head – Microcephaly or hydrocephaly; birdlike face, mid-face hypoplasia, Sprengel's deformity of neck, Eyes- Microphthalmia, ptosis, epicanthal folds, strabismus |
Inherited defect in DNA Repair causes loss of HSC that leads
to bone marrow failure. |
Anemia
normocellular or hypercellular bone marrow |
Gastrointestinal Atresias, imperforate
anus, TE fistula, malrotation, Kidney – Abnormal, ectopic, horseshoe, hypoplastic, or absent kidney; hydronephrosis |
FA gene
sequencing |
Incrreased chromosomal breakage in response to mitomycin C or diepoxybutane (quite sensitive but not entirely specific) | |
Acquired Aplastic Anemia | infections mucosal hemorrhage menorrhagia | especially pallor and petechiae.
The liver, spleen, and lymph nodes are typically enlarged in AA, if its enlarged it may suggest alternative diagnosis |
No known causes 70% cases, known cases are caused
by drugs, virus, radiation |
Anemia
normocellular or hypercellular bone marrow |
Gastrointestinal Atresias, imperforate
anus, TE fistula, malrotation, Kidney – Abnormal, ectopic, horseshoe, hypoplastic, or absent kidney; hydronephrosis |
hypocellular bone
marrow |
rapid onset | |
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) | Fatigue
●Dyspnea ●Hemoglobinuria Abdominal pain ●Bone marrow suppression ●Erectile dysfunction Chest pain ●Thrombosis ●Renal insufficiency |
Acquired mutation in PIGA gene --> problem in synthesis of
DGI ---> complement mediated Intravascular hemolysis |
Anemia
normocellular or hypercellular bone marrow |
●Hypo/Hyper
/Normo cellular, |
Flow cytometry | |||
Other inherited bone marrow failure syndromes
(Dyskeratosis congenita and other short telomere syndromes) |
Bone marrow failure
Classic mucocutaneous and additional dermatologic findings •Skin dyspigmentation •Nail irregularities •Leukoplakia •Premature graying/hair loss •Hyperhidrosis – 15 percent Ophthalmologic/Epiphora (excessive tearing/lacrimal duct stenosis) ●Neurologic/Cognitive •Developmental delay •Ataxia/cerebellar hypoplasia – approximately •Microcephaly Pulmonary disease (pulmonary fibrosis) ●Endocrine/Growth/Urologic features •Short stature •Intrauterine growth retardation •Hypogonadism/Undescended testes •Urethral stricture/phimosis •Osteoporosis and related complications |
Unlike Fanconi anemia, individuals with DC do not appear to have impaired fertility
●Dental manifestations (caries) ●Gastroenterologic/Hepatologic manifestations •Esophageal strictures •Liver disease (cirrhosis, fibrosis) or gastroenteropathy ●Cancer |
(DC) and telomere related
disorders, mutations in genes that maintain telomere length in rapidly dividing cells that lead to premature cell death, senescence, or genomic instability, which in turn results in impaired function and cellular homeostasis in many organs and tissues. |
Reticular dysgenesis | Flow cytometry | - chromosomal breakage test. | ||
Drug-induced or infection-associated pancytopenia | ||||||||
Rare syndromes,
Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), Bloom syndrome (BLM), ataxia telangiectasia (ATM), LIG4 syndrome (LIG4), NHEJ1 deficiency (NHEJ1), Seckel syndrome (ATR), cohesinopathies Roberts syndrome (ESCO2) Warsaw breakage syndrome (DDX11). |
microcephaly, short stature increased
malignancy |
no specific findings | Gastrointestinal Atresias, imperforate
anus, TE fistula, malrotation, Kidney – Abnormal, ectopic, horseshoe, hypoplastic, or absent kidney; hydronephrosis |
abnormal chromosomal breakage test | No bone
marrow failure | |||
De novo myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) | MDS can arise de novo or secondary to another bone marrow disorder; | bone marrow failure | Positive
chromosomal breakage tests |
Negitive
chromosomal breakage tests |