Telomere biology disorder presenting acutely with pulmonary fibrosis and hepatopulmonary syndrome in a young adult male.
Samantha Chin-Yun KungOlivia DixonSarah KentwellRaja S VasireddyJonathan RodgersYuming DingTony RahmanCaroline TallisIan A YangJohn A MackintoshPublished in: Respirology case reports (2023)
A 33-year-old man presented with acute dyspnoea and profound hypoxaemia, and had clubbing, greying of hair, orthodeoxia and fine inspiratory crackles. CT chest showed established pulmonary fibrosis in a usual interstitial pneumonia pattern. Additional investigations revealed a small patent foramen ovale, pancytopenia, and oesophageal varices and portal hypertensive gastropathy from liver cirrhosis. Telomere length testing demonstrated short telomeres (<1st percentile), confirming the diagnosis of a telomere biology disorder. An interstitial lung disease gene panel identified a pathogenic variant in TERT (c.1700C>T, p.(Thr567Met)) and a variant of uncertain significance in PARN (c.1159G>A, p.(Gly387Arg)). Combined lung and liver transplantation was deemed not suitable due to frailty and severe hepatopulmonary syndrome, and he died 56 days after presentation. Early recognition of the short telomere syndrome is important, and its multi-organ involvement poses challenges to management. Genetic screening may be important in younger patients with pulmonary fibrosis or in unexplained liver cirrhosis.
Keyphrases
- pulmonary fibrosis
- interstitial lung disease
- case report
- systemic sclerosis
- young adults
- genome wide
- computed tomography
- blood pressure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- liver failure
- respiratory failure
- air pollution
- copy number
- tyrosine kinase
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- positron emission tomography
- childhood cancer