Nijmegen syndrome in childhood: a clinical case
https://doi.org/10.17650/1818-8346-2024-19-2-83-87
Abstract
Nijmegen syndrome is a rare monogenic pathology with an autosomal recessive type of inheritance. The disease is manifested by congenital developmental anomalies and microcephaly, primary immunodeficiency, frequent recurrent viral and bacterial infections, retardation in physical and neuropsychic development. In the medical literature, 150 cases of the syndrome are described; pathology occurs more often among the Slavic population. Nijmegen syndrome belongs to a group of diseases with chromosomal instability. The pathogenetic feature of the syndrome is congenital immunodeficiency of the humoral (B-lymphocytes) and cellular (T-lymphocytes) components. According to statistics, 40 % of children with Nijmegen syndrome are diagnosed with malignant neoplasms. lymphoid tissue is more often affected (non-Hodgkin’s B and T-cell lymphomas, acute lymphoblastic leukemia), and the development of solid neoplasia is also possible. To diagnose Nijmegen syndrome, in addition to assessing the patient clinical status, it is necessary to conduct an extended immunological examination with the determination of immunoglobulins A, M, G and molecular genetic studies.
The article presents a clinical case of diagnosis and treatment of Nijmegen syndrome in childhood.
About the Authors
N. V. MalyuzhinskayaRussian Federation
Natalya V. Malyuzhinskaya.
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
M. A. Morgunova
Russian Federation
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
I. V. Petrova
Russian Federation
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
O. V. Polyakova
Russian Federation
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
V. V. Samokhvalova
Russian Federation
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
A. V. Bayurov
Russian Federation
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
G. V. Klitochenko
Russian Federation
1 Pavshikh Bortsov Ploshchad’, Volgograd 400131
References
1. Malyuzhinskaya N.V., Morgunova M.A., Petrova I.V. et al. Malignant neoplasms of childhood: a textbook. Volgograd: VolgSMU, 2022. Pp. 11–15. (In Russ.).
2. Malyuzhinskaya N.V., Petrova I.V., Vitina T.M. et al. Specific prevention of infectious diseases in children: textbook. Volgograd: VolgSMU, 2022. 88 р. (In Russ.).
3. Kagan M.Yu., Shulakova N.S., Gumirova R.A. et al. Nijmegen syndrome (clinical case). Pediatricheskaya farmakologiya = Pediatric Pharmacology 2012;9(3):102–5. (In Russ.).
4. Sharapova S.O., Fedorova A.S., Mareika Y. et al. Geographical distribution, incidence, malignancies, and outcome of 136 eastern slavic patients with Nijmegen breakage syndrome and NBN founder variant C.657_661DEL5. Front Immunol 2020;11:602482. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.602482
5. Matsumoto Y., Miyamoto T., Sakamoto H. et al. Two unrelated patients with MRE11A mutations and Nijmegen breakage syndrome-like severe microcephaly. DNA Repair 2011;10(3):314–21. DOI: 10.1016/j.dnarep.2010.12.002
6. Valiev T.T. Modern strategy for the diagnosis and treatment of non-Hodgkin lymphomas in children. Dis. doctor of medical sciences. Moscow, 2014. (In Russ.).
7. Warcoin M., Lespinasse J., Despouy G. et al. Fertility defects revealing germline biallelic nonsense NBN mutations. Hum Mutat 2009;30(3):424–30. DOI: 10.1002/humu.20904
8. Lamarche B.J., Orazio N.I., Weitzman M.D. The MRN complex in double-strand break repair and telomere maintenance. FEBS Lett 2010;584(17):3682–95. DOI: 10.1016/j.febslet.2010.07.029
Review
For citations:
Malyuzhinskaya N.V., Morgunova M.A., Petrova I.V., Polyakova O.V., Samokhvalova V.V., Bayurov A.V., Klitochenko G.V. Nijmegen syndrome in childhood: a clinical case. Oncohematology. 2024;19(2):83-87. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.17650/1818-8346-2024-19-2-83-87