Case Report Open Access
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2019. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.
World J Clin Cases. Sep 6, 2019; 7(17): 2630-2636
Published online Sep 6, 2019. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v7.i17.2630
Wilson disease associated with immune thrombocytopenia: A case report and review of the literature
Tian-Jiao Ma, Gui-Lian Sun, Fang Yao, Zhi-Liang Yang, Department of Pediatrics, The First Hospital of China Medical University, Shenyang 110001, Liaoning Province, China
ORCID number: Tian-Jiao Ma (0000-0002-5846-871X); Gui-Lian Sun (0000-0002-7725-5955); Fang Yao (0000-0002-5327-1272); Zhi-Liang Yang (0000-0002-7098-2519).
Author contributions: Ma TJ was responsible for acquisition of the clinical information and writing the manuscript; Yao F assisted in developing the figures and table for the manuscript; Sun GL was responsible for acquisition of the clinical information and reviewing the manuscript; Yang ZL analyzed the data and wrote and reviewed the manuscript; all authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Informed consent statement: Consent was obtained from the patient and her relatives for the publication of this report and any accompanying images.
Conflict-of-interest statement: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
CARE Checklist (2016) statement: The authors have read the CARE Checklist (2016), and the manuscript was prepared and revised according to the CARE Checklist (2016).
Open-Access: This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Corresponding author: Zhi-Liang Yang, MD, PhD, Attending Doctor, Chief Doctor, Department of Pediatrics, The First Hospital of China Medical University, No. 155, Nanjing North Street, Heping District, Shenyang 110001, Liaoning Province, China. sizhewujiu@163.com
Telephone: +86-24-83282527
Received: February 22, 2019
Peer-review started: February 24, 2019
First decision: June 19, 2019
Revised: June 30, 2019
Accepted: July 20, 2019
Article in press: July 20, 2019
Published online: September 6, 2019
Processing time: 197 Days and 7.9 Hours

Abstract
BACKGROUND

Wilson disease (WD) is a genetic disorder of hepatic copper excretion, leading to copper accumulation in various tissues. The manifestations are quite variable, and hemolytic anemia is the most common hematological presentation. WD associated with thrombocytopenia is very rare.

CASE SUMMARY

We report the case of an 11-year-old Chinese girl with WD that was associated with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP). Thrombocytopenia was the initial chief complaint for her to visit a hematologist, and ITP was diagnosed based on the results of a bone marrow biopsy and positive antiplatelet autoantibodies. About two weeks before the thrombocytopenia was found, the patient developed drooling. Tremors developed in her right hand about one week after being diagnosed with ITP, after which she was admitted to our hospital. Further evaluations were performed. Ceruloplasmin was decreased, with an increased level of copper in her 24-h urine excretion. Kayser Fleischer's ring (K-F ring) was positive. The ultrasound showed liver cirrhosis, and brain magnetic resonance imaging showed that the lenticular nucleus, caudate nucleus, and brainstem presented a low signal intensity in T1-weighted images and high signal intensity in T2-weighted images. WD was diagnosed and a genetic analysis was performed. A compound heterozygous mutation in ATP7B was detected; c.2333G>T (p.Arg778Leu) in exon 8 and c.3809A>G (p.Asn1270Ser) in exon 18. The former was inherited from her father and the latter from her mother. However, her parents showed normal liver function and negative K-F rings. Such a compound mutation in a case of WD associated with ITP in children has not been published previously.

CONCLUSION

WD can associate with thrombocytopenia but the mechanism is still unclear. We recommend that antiplatelet autoantibodies should be tested in WD patients with thrombocytopenia in future to verify the association.

Key Words: Wilson disease; Immune thrombocytopenia; ATP7B; Case report

Core tip: Our findings indicate that Wilson disease (WD) can associate with thrombocytopenia. Some recessive heterozygous mutations can induce WD in combination with other recessive heterozygous mutations in ATP7B. Thrombocytopenia patients with neurological signs or abnormal liver function should be screened for WD because early detection and treatment of WD lead to a better outcome. We recommend that antiplatelet autoantibodies should be tested in WD patients with thrombocytopenia in future to verify the association.



INTRODUCTION

Wilson Disease (WD), first described in 1912, is a hereditary genetic disorder induced by the dysfunction of copper metabolism in the liver. WD is fatal if untreated, but the prognosis can be good with timely and lifelong management[1-2]. The initial signs for WD are quite varied, and some rare presentations may lead to delays in diagnosis and treatment[3-5]. It is caused by mutations in ATP7B, which encodes a membrane-bound P1B-type ATPase involved in copper excretion from hepatocytes. The accumulation of copper in the body can lead to multiple organ damage. ATP7B was first identified as the responsible gene in 1993, and now over 500 mutations have been detected and most patients with WD are compound heterozygotes[6-8]. Some mutations in ATP7B show relatively higher frequencies in special populations, such as the mutation resulting in p.Arg778Leu in the Far East[9-15]. The identification of a mutation supports the diagnosis of WD, while a compound heterozygous status confirms the diagnosis. Recently, Atox1 and COMMD1 were also concerned in WD patients, but there was no evidence to show their contribution[16].

Coombs-negative hemolytic anemia is the hematological presentation reported for WD and is rare. Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is an acquired hemorrhagic disease caused by the accelerated clearance of platelets induced by antiplatelet autoantibodies such as antiglycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa[17-19]. WD has been associated with ITP in an adult[20], but such association has not been reported in children.

Here, we report a case of genetically-confirmed WD caused by a compound ATP7B mutation that was inherited from the proband’s unaffected parents. The patient was diagnosed with ITP and revealed WD soon after the diagnosis of ITP, and we also discuss the association of WD with ITP.

CASE PRESENTATION
Chief complaints

The proband (Figure 1A) was an 11-year-old Chinese girl who was admitted to our hospital with chief complaints of thrombocytopenia for 15 d, and tremor in her right hand for 3 d.

Figure 1
Figure 1 Wilson disease patient’s family pedigree showing the mutations detected in ATP7B. A: The family pedigree. The arrow indicates the proband; her parents had no signs of Wilson disease; B: Non-synonymous mutations detected in the family. The proband had both mutations, while the c.3809A>G mutation was only detected in her mother and the c.2333G>T mutation was only detected in her father.
History of present illness

About 15 d previously, she experienced coughing, drooling of saliva, and dysarthria without fever and was admitted to a local hospital with a diagnosis of epiglottitis. A routine blood test found a platelet count of 54 × 109/L, after which she visited a hematologist. A bone marrow examination and testing for antiplatelet antibodies were performed. HLA Class I antibody was negative, but antibodies against GP IIb/IIIa, GP Ib/Ix, and GP Ia/type IIa were positive. In bone marrow smears, granulocytic and erythrocytic series were normal, while megakaryocytes appeared immature and platelet-producing megakaryocytes were not found. According to these results, ITP was diagnosed. The child was not treated for ITP because her platelet count was greater than 50 × 109/L and she had no signs of hemorrhagic tendency. About 3 days previously, she exhibited an involuntary tremor, with numbness in her right hand.

History of past illness

She was healthy in the past.

Personal and family history

Her medical and family histories were unremarkable, and she had not started menstruating. Her parents had no history of consanguinity.

Physical examination upon admission

On physical examination, she had dysarthria with normal orientation. She had no rashes, hemorrhagic signs, hepatomegaly, or splenomegaly. The pharyngeal reflex, abdominal reflexes, patellar tendon reflexes, finger-to-nose test, and Romberg’s sign were normal. Barbinski signs were negative. Alternating movements with hands were slow, and her right hand trembled. Sensitivity to heat or pain stimulation was normal. Kayser Fleischer's (K-F) rings were found under a slit lamp.

Laboratory examinations

Laboratory investigations revealed serum platelet counts of 34-43 × 109/L (normal range, 100-300 × 109/L), and hemoglobin of 112-123 g/L (normal range, 120-140 g/L). Liver function tests revealed alanine aminotransferase (ALT) of 59 U/L (normal range, 7-40 U/L), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) of 65 U/L (normal range, 13-35 U/L), albumin (ALB) of 26 g/L (normal range, 40-55 g/L), total serum bilirubin of 45 µmol/L (normal range, 3.4-20.5 µmol/L), serum direct bilirubin (DBL) of 12.9 µmol/L (normal range, 0.3-8.5 µmol/L), and plasma ammonia of 35 µmol/L (normal range, 11-25 µmol/L). Her blood clotting profile showed a prothrombin time (PT) of 18.2 s (normal range, 11.0-14.3 s), prothrombin time activity (PTA) of 54% (normal range, 80-120 s), prothrombin time [international normalized ratio (INR)] of 1.53 (normal range, 08-1.15), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) of 55.5 s (normal range, 32.6-43.0 s), and fibrinogen of 1.27 g/L (normal range, 2.0-4.0 g/l). Plasma ceruloplasmin was 190 mmol/L (normal range, 220-330 mmol/L) and 24-h urine copper was 203 µg/24 h (normal value, <100 µg/24 h). Her lactic acid level and urinalysis were normal. Antibodies for viral hepatitis series (including hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E viruses) were negative. Tests of immunoglobin M for Coxsackie virus, herpes virus, cytomegalovirus, Toxoplasmosis gondii, rubella virus, adenovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, and Mycoplasma pneumoniae were negative. Antibodies for autoimmune hepatitis and connective tissue disease (including AMA-M2, LKM-1, LC-1, SLA/LP, Ro-52, PML, sp100, gp210, M2-3E, anti-nuclear antibodies, anti-ds-DNA, Sm, SS-A, SS-B, and ENA-Jo-1) were negative.

Liver biopsy was not recommended because of the patient’s thrombocytopenia and disturbances in blood clotting functions. With written consent from her parents, genetic analysis for WD was performed. DNA was extracted from the peripheral blood samples, which were collected from the proband and her parents using the QIAamp Blood DNA Mini Kit (Qiagen, Germany). PCR was performed to amplify each exon and its neighboring introns using an ABI9700 PCR amplifier (Life Technologies, United States). Direct sequencing was performed on the amplified DNA fragments using the ABI3500 sequencer (Life Technologies, USA) and the results were subjected to sequence analysis using Sequence Scanner v1.0 (Applied Biosystems, United States).

Genetic analysis showed that the proband had a compound heterozygous mutation in the ATP7B gene; c.2333G>T (p.Arg778Leu) in exon 8 and c.3809A>G (p.Asn1270Ser) in exon 18 (reference sequence: NM_000053.3). The former was inherited from her father and the latter was inherited from her mother (Figure 1B).

The detected mutations were interpreted according to the guidelines from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and patient phenotype[21]. The PCR amplification and sequencing procedure were performed by Shenyang Kingmed for Clinical Laboratory (Shenyang, China), which provides third party inspection services. The hypothetical effects of the mutations on protein function were analyzed using the Polymorphism Phenotyping v2 (PolyPhen-2) prediction tool (http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/dbsearch.shtml), SIFT (http://sift.jcvi.org/www/SIFT_enst_submit.html), and MutationTaster (http://www.mutationtaster.org/index.html).

The c.2333G>T (p.Arg778Leu) mutation is known as a polymorphism (number rs28942074) and located in the transmembrane domain 4 (TM4). The p.Asn1270Ser mutation is located in the ATP hinge of ceruloplasmin. PolyPhen-2 and SIFT analyses suggested that the c.2333G>T mutation can negatively affect gene function, while MutationTaster suggested it is benign. PolyPhen-2, SIFT, and MutationTaster analyses suggested that the c.3809A>G mutation can be harmful (Table 1). A synonymous mutation, c.2310C>G (p.Leu770=) (rs398123136) in exon 8, was also detected in the proband and her father (data not shown).

Table 1 Functional evaluation of the ATP7B mutations detected.
Base changeExon numberAmino acid changePolyPhen-2 analysisSIFT analysisMutationTaster analysis
c.2333G>T8p.Arg778LeuProbably damagingDamagingPolymorphism
c.3809A>G18p.Asn1270SerProbably damagingDamagingDisease causing
Imaging examinations

The electroencephalogram (EEG) was normal. Brain magnetic resonance imaging scans showed a low signal intensity in T1-weighted images, and high signal intensity in T2-weighted images from the lenticular nucleus, caudate nucleus, and brainstem. Ultrasonography showed that the liver decreased in volume with an unsmooth surface and blunt edge, and the internal echogenicity was enhanced with tortuous hepatic veins. Splenomegaly was also observed.

FINAL DIAGNOSIS

WD was diagnosed.

TREATMENT

She was not treated for ITP because she had no hemorrhagic signs, but she was surveilled with the count of PLT. Liver protective therapy was begun when the patient’s liver function was found to be abnormal. After the diagnosis of WD, oral penicillamine (from 125 mg to 1000 mg per day in one week, administered in four doses finally) and zinc sulfate (300 mg per day, administered in three doses) were administered, and intramuscular injections of dimercapto propanol (100 mg per day for two weeks then weaned off over two weeks) were also given after evaluating the benefits and possible side effects.

OUTCOME AND FOLLOW-UP

The 24-h urine copper was reexamined and was 261 µg/24 h after one month. The oral therapies were continued, and dimercaptopropanol was administered for another two weeks, weaned off over two weeks, repeated over three months, and then injected once weekly. At the 6-mo follow-up, the drooling of saliva had disappeared and the tremors in the patient’s right hand and dysarthria had slightly improved, but the ultrasound results showed no marked changes. Platelet count increased and was sustained at about 60 × 109/L over the next month.

DISCUSSION

WD is an autosomal recessive disease. More than 500 mutations in ATP7B have been identified in patients with WD and most patients are compound heterozygotes[6]. In the proband’s family, c.2333G>T (p.Arg778Leu) and c.3809A>G (p.Asn1270Ser) were detected in the father and mother, respectively, and both mutations had been reported[13,15,22], in some cases as a compound heterozygote without thrombocytopenia[23,24]. The missense heterozygous mutations in the parents were autosomal recessives, even though the mutations induced abnormal protein function according to the bioinformatic analyses. It is possible that a normal allele produces sufficient protein to transport the copper in hepatocytes. But, when the patient inherited both mutations from her parents, the deleterious effects of the compound mutation could not be counteracted by a normal allele.

WD is characterized by the toxic accumulation of copper mainly in the liver and brain, but some other systems can be involved. Hemolysis has been reported as a presenting feature in 12% of 220 WD patients[25]. Thrombocytopenia with negative antiplatelet antibodies has been reported in children as a result of hypersplenism and/or a side effect of D-penicillamine therapy[26,27]. It is reported that the stability of biological membranes can be disturbed by an overload of copper which was accumulated on the membranes. If the membranes of erythrocytes are affected, hemolysis can be induced. We believe that platelets are more easily destroyed and cleared in patients with WD because the membranes of platelets can also be disturbed. It has been reported that the increased depolarization of the mitochondrial membranes can enhance the apoptosis of platelets in patients with chronic ITP[28]. The copper overload on membranes may also enhance apoptosis of platelets by disturbing mitochondrial membranes, but this will need to be investigated further. Serum copper is usually decreased in WD patients. Anemia and neutropenia were the most common hematologic abnormalities identified in copper deficiency patients[29,30]. It was considered that hypocupremia may be a reversible cause of bone marrow dysplasia that caused cytopenia[31]. Hypocupremia induced bone marrow dysplasia may be involved in thrombocytopenia.

In our case, autoimmune diseases and viral and Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections were excluded because of the absence of autoimmune, viral, and M. pneumoniae antibodies. Antibodies positive for GP IIb/IIIa, GP Ib/Ix, and GP Ia/type IIa and the bone marrow findings supported the diagnosis of ITP. Autoantibody-induced pathologies are quite complex[32]. In our case, platelets might initially have been destroyed because of the increased copper accumulation on the membranes. The GP was then released from platelet membranes and accumulated in blood. If the autoimmune response was triggered by GP, antibodies can be generated and the platelet count can decrease further. This is a reasonable explanation for the positive GP antibodies in our case, while these antibodies were negative in the other reported cases since the cases can be at different stages of the disease.

The ultimate therapy for WD is the clearance of copper, and the prognosis is better if therapy is started as early as possible. The first-line treatment for ITP is generally using corticosteroids, or intravenous immunoglobulin in severe cases[33,34]. But thrombocytopenia in WD cases has been reported to have a poor response to glucocorticoids[20,26,27]. After we evaluated the possible risks to the patient, glucocorticoids were not given. The observation that the patient’s platelet counts ceased to decrease after copper clearance therapy also indicated the association of clearance of platelets with copper burden.

CONCLUSION

WD can associate with thrombocytopenia but the mechanism is still unclear. We recommend that anti-platelet autoantibodies should be tested in WD patients with thrombocytopenia in future to verify the association.

Footnotes

Manuscript source: Unsolicited Manuscript

Specialty type: Medicine, research and experimental

Country of origin: China

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