4.6 Article

Fulminant Wilson's Disease Requiring Liver Transplantation in One Monozygotic Twin Despite Identical Genetic Mutation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages 1325-1329

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-6143.2010.03071.x

Keywords

End-stage liver disease; liver failure; liver transplantation; twins; Wilson's disease

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Acute decompensated Wilson's disease (WD) that presents as fulminant hepatic failure carries significant mortality without hepatic replacement. The abnormal gene implicated in WD, ATP7B, has been mapped to chromosome 13, and leads to decreased passage of copper from hepatocytes to bile. Excess copper accumulation exceeds hepatocyte storage capacity resulting in intracellular necrosis, apoptosis and cell death in various organs of the body. The hepatic injury induced by the abnormal accumulation of copper in WD has variable presentation such as acute hepatitis, rapid hepatic deterioration resembling fulminant hepatic failure, or as progressive chronic liver disease in the form of chronic active hepatitis or cirrhosis. There are reports in the literature describing monozygotic (identical) twins with similar hepatic progression requiring liver transplantation, however, with different neurological outcome after transplant. We report a case of one monozygotic twin presenting with acute liver failure requiring emergent liver transplantation while the other twin presented with mild liver disease, when both shared an identical genetic mutation.

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