4.7 Article

Iron Refractory Iron Deficiency Anemia: Presentation With Hyperferritinemia and Response to Oral Iron Therapy

Journal

PEDIATRICS
Volume 131, Issue 2, Pages E620-E625

Publisher

AMER ACAD PEDIATRICS
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-1303

Keywords

iron; TMPRSS6; hypomorphic mutations; hepcidin; whole exome sequencing; anemia

Categories

Funding

  1. Government of Canada through Genome Canada
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  3. Ontario Genomics Institute [OGI-049]
  4. Genome Quebec
  5. Genome British Columbia
  6. McLaughlin Centre
  7. Canadian Gene Cure Foundation
  8. Cole Foundation
  9. Fonds de la Recherche en Sante au Quebec
  10. Foundation of Stars
  11. Burroughs Welcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists
  12. National Institutes of Health [K08 DK084204]

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Iron-refractory iron-deficiency anemia (IRIDA) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in TMPRSS6. Patients have hypochromic microcytic anemia refractory to oral iron and are only partially responsive to parenteral iron administration. We report a French-Canadian kindred in which 2 siblings presented in early childhood with severe microcytic anemia, hypoferremia, and hyper-ferritinemia. Both children have been successfully treated solely with low-dose oral iron since diagnosis. Clinical and biological presentation did not fit any previously described genetic iron-deficiency anemia. Whole exome sequencing identified in both patients compound heterozygous mutations of TMPRSS6 leading to p.G442R and p.E522K, 2 mutations previously reported to cause classic IRIDA, and no additional mutations in known iron-regulatory genes. Thus, the phenotype associated with the unique combination of mutations uncovered in both patients expands the spectrum of disease associated with TMPRSS6 mutations to include iron deficiency anemia that is accompanied by hyperferritinemia at initial presentation and is responsive to continued oral iron therapy. Our results have implications for genetic testing in early childhood iron deficiency anemia. Importantly, they emphasize that whole exome sequencing can be used as a diagnostic tool and greatly facilitate the elucidation of the genetic basis of unusual clinical presentations, including hypomorphic mutations or compound heterozygosity leading to different phenotypes in known Mendelian diseases. Pediatrics 2013; 131: e620-e625

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