Background: Surfactant metabolism disorders may result in diffuse lung disease in children. Case presentation: We report a 3-years-old boy with dry cough, progressive hypoxemia, dyspnea and bilateral ground glass opacities at chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) who had no variants in genes encoding surfactant proteins or transcription factors. Lung histology strongly suggested an abnormality of surfactant protein. A 7-month course of pulse intravenous high-dose methylprednisolone plus oral hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin led to gradual weaning from oxygen and oral steroids, and to improvement of cough and dyspnea. Over the follow-up period, hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin were not withdrawn as cough and dyspnea re-appeared at each attempt and disappeared at re-start. At 6 years of age chest HRCT still appeared unchanged, but clinical symptoms or signs were absent. Conclusions: In children suspected of inborn errors of pulmonary surfactant metabolism who do not have a recognized genetic mutation, lung biopsy with consistent histology may help physicians to address the definitive diagnosis.
CITATION STYLE
Montella, S., Vece, T. J., Langston, C., Carrera, P., Nogee, L. M., Hamvas, A., … Santamaria, F. (2015). A disorder of surfactant metabolism without identified genetic mutations. Italian Journal of Pediatrics, 41(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13052-015-0198-3
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