Long-term follow-up of a patient with neonatal form of Gaucher disease

Am J Med Genet A. 2023 Jul;191(7):1917-1922. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.63196. Epub 2023 Apr 3.

Abstract

Gaucher disease is the most common of the lysosomal storage diseases. It presents a wide phenotypic continuum, in which one may identify the classically described phenotypes, including type 1 form with visceral involvement, type 2 acute neuropathic early-infantile form, and type 3 subacute neuronopathic form. At the most severe end there is the perinatal form with onset in utero or during the neonatal period. The very few reported cases of neonatal onset Gaucher disease presented high and early mortality, due to neurological or visceral involvement, including liver failure. We report our experience treating a patient with the neonatal form of Gaucher disease who presented at birth with thrombocytopenia, hepatosplenomegaly and cholestasis. Despite early enzyme replacement therapy, liver disease was progressive. Liver biopsy showed hepatocellular giant-cell transformation, a nonspecific finding consistent with inflammation. The lack of response to enzyme replacement therapy and the microscopic findings suggested that mechanisms apart from substrate accumulation and Gaucher cells may play a role in the hepatic pathogenesis in Gaucher disease. An attempt to use corticosteroids at the age of 3 months resulted in a dramatic improvement in liver function and resulted in long-term survival. The patient is alive and 2 years old at this writing. Our case suggests that inflammatory processes may be important in the early pathogenesis of Gaucher disease and that early use of corticosteroids may open the way to a new therapeutic approach.

Keywords: acid β-glucocerebrosidase; corticosteroids; giant cell hepatitis; inflammation; neonatal cholestasis; neonatal onset Gaucher disease.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Female
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Gaucher Disease* / complications
  • Gaucher Disease* / diagnosis
  • Gaucher Disease* / drug therapy
  • Glucosylceramidase / genetics
  • Hepatomegaly
  • Humans
  • Pregnancy

Substances

  • Glucosylceramidase