Case Reports in Oncology (Nov 2020)

An Unusual Case of Cholestatic Hepatitis due to Light-Chain Deposition Disease

  • Alessandro Grembiale,
  • Elena Garlatti,
  • Anna Ermacora,
  • Silvia Grazioli,
  • Massimiliano Balbi,
  • Maurizio Tonizzo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000509508
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
pp. 1343 – 1348

Abstract

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Light-chain deposition disease (LCDD) is a rare paraproteinaemia characterized by the deposition of monoclonal immunoglobulins with a non-fibrillar structure and hence Congo red negative deposits. Kidney disease is the more frequent manifestation, but other organs may also be involved. A 70-year-old man with hypertension and mild chronic renal failure showed a hepatomegaly without splenomegaly. His renal and liver test rapidly got worse. A serum electrophoresis and immunofixation isolated monoclonal kappa light-chain gammopathy, with serum free kappa light chain excess. The bone marrow biopsy showed the presence of interstitial infiltration of plasma cells like multiple myeloma type at initial phase. Periumbilical fat biopsy was negative. Echocardiography demonstrated an infiltrative cardiac disease. The biopsies of the duodenum small intestine mucosa showed flaps with eosinophil material (Masson’s staining) with atrophic crypts and chronic inflammation at chorion level. Amyloid substance was negative. There was a strong positivity for light chains kappa compatible with LCDD. A liver biopsy confirmed this finding. Therapy with dexamethasone and bortezomib improved clinical state and hepatic and renal laboratory tests. Chemotherapy based on novel anti-myeloma agents should be rapidly considered in LCDD patients with severe organ involvement.

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