Acquired deficiency in C1-inhibitor associated with signet ring cell gastric adenocarcinoma: a probable connection of antitumor-associated antibodies, hemolytic anemia, and complement turnover

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_8C5F78BA57F8
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Case report (case report): feedback on an observation with a short commentary.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Acquired deficiency in C1-inhibitor associated with signet ring cell gastric adenocarcinoma: a probable connection of antitumor-associated antibodies, hemolytic anemia, and complement turnover
Journal
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Author(s)
Wasserfallen  J. B., Spaeth  P., Guillou  L., Pecoud  A. R.
ISSN
0091-6749 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/1995
Volume
95
Number
1 Pt 1
Pages
124-31
Notes
Case Reports
Journal Article
Review --- Old month value: Jan
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acquired deficiency in C1-inhibitor (C1-INH) associated with malignancy is often asymptomatic because clinical manifestations are not dependent on a critical complement threshold (in contrast to hereditary C1-INH deficiency). Increased complement consumption involving different kinds of antibodies is the postulated mechanism for this disease, but other factors must play an important role. CASE REPORT: A 76-year-old woman with unremarkable medical history experienced three episodes of angioedema over 6 months. Investigations revealed a complement profile characteristic of acquired deficiency in C1-INH, a hemolytic anemia, and a signet ring cell adenocarcinoma (linitis plastica). A gastrectomy and a splenectomy were performed. The postoperative course was characterized by a complete disappearance of the symptoms of angioedema and hemolytic anemia. A local recurrence of the tumor 5 months later could not be resected. The patient died 17 months after the initial surgery was performed. RESULTS: Quantitative and functional analyses of the complement factors showed persistent excessive complement consumption. Markers of hemolytic anemia disappeared after tumor removal but recurred in the second part of the disease evolution. Immunohistochemical findings in tumor tissue showed loss of normal blood group antigens but expression of Lea antigen, as well as C1q deposition. CONCLUSION: To explain the whole clinical and laboratory picture, we hypothesize a connection between tumor immunohistochemical profile, complement consumption, and hemolytic anemia. Tumor cell surface antigens might lead to a permanent but asymptomatic complement consumption that is worsened and becomes clinically manifest by superimposed hemolytic anemia caused by cross-reactive antibodies to newly expressed blood group antigens on tumor cells. This hypothesis should be confirmed by other observations.
Keywords
Aged Anemia, Hemolytic/diagnosis/*etiology/pathology Angioneurotic Edema/complications/diagnosis/pathology Antibodies, Neoplasm/*blood Carcinoma, Signet Ring Cell/*complications/diagnosis/pathology Chronic Disease Complement C1 Inactivator Proteins/analysis/*deficiency Complement System Proteins/*analysis Fatal Outcome Female Humans Immunohistochemistry Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/diagnosis/pathology Stomach/pathology Stomach Neoplasms/*complications/diagnosis/pathology
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
28/01/2008 12:59
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:50
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