Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (multiple myeloma)
36,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Orbital involvement in multiple myeloma is unusual. We describe the case of an 85-year-old woman who presented with right eye proptosis, reduced visual acuity and diplopia. Computed tomography showed a lobulated, enhancing soft tissue mass arising from the right greater wing of the sphenoid with intraconal, lacrimal gland and ocular muscle involvement. Histopathology revealed predominantly atypical plasma cells in a background of reactive lymphocytes, with monoclonality towards kappa light chain protein, suggestive of multiple myeloma. This case illustrates the diagnostic imaging challenge of orbital multiple myeloma.
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PMID:Orbital multiple myeloma: a diagnostic challenge. 2879 98

IgG4-related disease is a fibro-inflammatory condition that can affect nearly any organ system. Common presentations include major salivary and lacrimal gland enlargement, orbital disease, autoimmune pancreatitis, retroperitoneal fibrosis and tubulointerstitial nephritis. This review focuses on the hematologic manifestations of IgG4-related disease, including lymphadenopathy, eosinophilia, and polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. The disease can easily be missed by unsuspecting hematologists, as patients may present with clinical problems that mimic disorders such as multicentric Castleman disease, lymphoma, plasma cell neoplasms and hypereosinophilic syndromes. When IgG4-related disease is suspected, serum protein electrophoresis and IgG subclasses are helpful as initial tests but a firm histological diagnosis is essential both to confirm the diagnosis and to rule out mimickers. The central histopathological features are a dense, polyclonal, lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate enriched with IgG4-positive plasma cells (with an IgG4/IgG ratio >40%), storiform fibrosis, and obliterative phlebitis. Importantly for hematologists, the latter two features are seen in all tissues except bone marrow and lymph nodes, making these two sites suboptimal for histological confirmation. Many patients follow an indolent course and respond well to treatment, but a significant proportion may have highly morbid or fatal complications such as periaortitis, severe retroperitoneal fibrosis or pachymeningitis. Corticosteroids are effective but cause new or worsening diabetes in about 40% of patients. Initial response rates to rituximab are high but durable remissions are rare. More intensive lymphoma chemotherapy regimens may be required in rare cases of severe, refractory disease, and targeted therapy against plasmablasts, IgE and other disease biomarkers warrant further exploration.
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PMID:IgG4-related disease: what a hematologist needs to know. 3070 99

Background: Serum IgG4 is typically measured to investigate for Immunoglobulin G4-related Disease (IgG4-RD), a fibroinflammatory condition associated with polyclonal increase in serum IgG4. However, increased IgG4 can also be monoclonal, and little is known about IgG4 myeloma. Methods: We describe two cases of IgG4 myeloma without clinical, radiologic, or laboratory features of IgG4-related disease. Results: An 84 year old man presented with anemia and compression fractures and a 77 year old man presented with anemia, hypercalcemia and renal failure. Both had markedly elevated monoclonal serum IgG4, 34 g/L and 48 g/L in the beta region, and increased IgG positive bone marrow plasma cells, 50% and 80%, respectively. Neither had clinical or radiological manifestations of IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) such as salivary or lacrimal gland swelling, autoimmune pancreatitis , or retroperitoneal fibrosis. Both cases responded well to standard myeloma therapy. The IgG4 paraprotein caused spuriously elevated beta-2 microglobulin of 45.2 mg/L in case two due to interference with the assay. Conclusion: These cases illustrate the importance of performing serum protein electrophoresis in tandem with IgG subclasses to distinguish between polyclonal and monoclonal increases in serum IgG4. The lack of typical IgG4-RD features in these two patients suggests that monoclonal elevation in serum IgG4 alone is insufficient to cause the organ damage characteristic of IgG4-RD. Larger studies of IgG myeloma subtypes are warranted to explore whether IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4 myeloma differ in natural history and whether the interference with beta-2 microglobulin is specific to IgG4 monoclonal proteins.
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PMID:IgG4 plasma cell myeloma without clinical evidence of IgG4-related disease: a report of two cases. 3289 54


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