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Adult-onset CblC deficiency: a challenging diagnosis involving different adult clinical specialists.

Silvia KalantariBrigida BrezziValeria BracciamàAntonella BarrecaPaolo NozzaTiziana VaisittiAntonio AmorosoSilvia DeaglioMarco ManganaroFrancesco PortaMarco Spada
Published in: Orphanet journal of rare diseases (2022)
Adult onset CblC disease is a rare disorder whose diagnosis can be delayed due to poor awareness regarding its presenting insidious symptoms and biochemical hallmarks. To avoid misdiagnosis, we suggest that adult onset CblC deficiency is acknowledged as a separate entity from pediatric late onset cases, and that the disease is considered in the differential diagnosis in adult patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndromes and/or slow unexplained decline in renal function and/or idiopathic neuropathies, spinal cord degenerations, ataxias and/or recurrent thrombosis and/or visual field defects, maculopathy and optic disc atrophy. Plasma homocysteine measurement should be the first line for differential diagnosis when the disease is suspected. To further aid diagnosis, it is important that genes belonging to the intracellular cobalamin pathway are included within gene panels routinely tested for atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome and chronic kidney disorders.
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