Successful treatment of telomeropathy-related interstitial lung disease with immunosuppression and danazol

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Abstract

We report the case of a 42-year-old female with a history of finger clubbing which improved during pregnancy, a history of unexplained hepatosplenomegaly, and subsequent non-specific interstitial pneumonia with respiratory failure. Given a personal and family history of early greying of the hair, the peripheral blood monocyte telomere length was measured and was confirmed to be <1st centile, explaining the multiorgan presentation. She was treated with prednisolone, mycophenolate mofetil, and the synthetic androgen danazol with a dramatic improvement in respiratory failure and lung function. After 18 months of danazol treatment, the peripheral blood monocyte telomere length had returned to the normal range.

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Chambers, D. C., Lutzky, V. P., Apte, S. H., Godbolt, D., Feenstra, J., & Mackintosh, J. (2020). Successful treatment of telomeropathy-related interstitial lung disease with immunosuppression and danazol. Respirology Case Reports, 8(6). https://doi.org/10.1002/rcr2.607

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