1. Iron Refractory Iron Deficiency Anemia in Dizygotic Twins Due to a Novel Gene Mutation in Addition to Polymorphisms Associated With High Susceptibility to Develop Ferropenic Anemia
- Author
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Joana Pinto MM, Gustavo Nobre de Jesus MM, Mónica Palma Anselmo MM, Lúcia Gonçalves MSc, Daniela Brás BSc, João Madeira Lopes MD, João Meneses MD, Rui Victorino MD PhD, and Paula Faustino PhD
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Iron refractory iron deficiency anemia (IRIDA) is an autosomal recessive ferropenic anemia. Its hypochromic microcytic pattern is associated with low transferrin saturation, normal-high ferritin, and inappropriately high hepcidin level. This entity is caused by mutants of the TMPRSS6 gene that encodes the protein matriptase II, which influences hepcidin expression, an iron metabolism counterregulatory protein. We report two 29-year-old dizygotic female twins with ferropenic, hypochromic microcytic anemia with 20 years of evolution, refractory to oral iron therapy. After exclusion of gastrointestinal etiologies, IRIDA diagnosis was suspected and a novel mutation in the TMPRSS6 gene was identified. It was found in intron 11 (c.1396+4 A>T) and seems to affect the gene expression. In addition, 3 polymorphisms already associated with a higher risk of developing iron deficiency anemia were also found (D521D, V736A, and Y739Y). Our case reports an undescribed mutation causing IRIDA and supports the hypothesis that this clinical syndrome may be more common than previously thought and its genetics more heterogeneous than initially described.
- Published
- 2017
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