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Case Reports
. 2013 Aug;13(8):2201-6.
doi: 10.1111/ajt.12297. Epub 2013 Jun 3.

Two patients with history of STEC-HUS, posttransplant recurrence and complement gene mutations

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Free article
Case Reports

Two patients with history of STEC-HUS, posttransplant recurrence and complement gene mutations

M Alberti et al. Am J Transplant. 2013 Aug.
Free article

Abstract

Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is a disease of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia and acute renal failure. About 90% of cases are secondary to infections by Escherichia coli strains producing Shiga-like toxins (STEC-HUS), while 10% are associated with mutations in genes encoding proteins of complement system (aHUS). We describe two patients with a clinical history of STEC-HUS, who developed end-stage renal disease (ESRD) soon after disease onset. They received a kidney transplant but lost the graft for HUS recurrence, a complication more commonly observed in aHUS. Before planning a second renal transplantation, the two patients underwent genetic screening for aHUS-associated mutations that revealed the presence of a heterozygous CFI mutation in patient #1 and a heterozygous MCP mutation in patient #2, and also in her mother who donated the kidney. This finding argues that the two cases originally diagnosed as STEC-HUS had indeed aHUS triggered by STEC infection on a genetic background of impaired complement regulation. Complement gene sequencing should be performed before kidney transplantation in patients who developed ESRD following STEC-HUS since they may be undiagnosed cases of aHUS, at risk of posttransplant recurrence. Furthermore, genetic analysis of donors is mandatory before living-related transplantation to exclude carriers of HUS-predisposing mutations.

Keywords: Complement factor I; Shiga-toxin; gene mutation; hemolytic uremic syndrome; kidney transplantation; membrane cofactor protein.

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