eJHaem (Oct 2024)

Antiphospholipid syndrome, monoclonal gammopathy, and cryoglobulinemia overlap leading to recurrent cutaneous microvascular thrombosis: A case report and retrospective cohort study

  • Alexandra Bohm,
  • Bo Angela Wan,
  • Amir Karin,
  • Lauren J. Lee,
  • Agnes Y. Y. Lee,
  • Edward M. Conway,
  • Chieh Min Benjamin Lai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jha2.987
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
pp. 971 – 975

Abstract

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Abstract Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), cryoglobulinemia, and monoclonal gammopathies are variably accompanied by thrombotic complications. We describe a patient with recurrent skin microvascular thrombosis, APS, cryoglobulinemia, marginal zone lymphoma, and IgMκ monoclonal gammopathy, responsive to chemoimmunotherapy. The cryoglobulin fraction contained the IgMκ paraprotein, while antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) were predominantly in the cryosupernatant. A retrospective analysis of aPL‐positive patients in our institution showed that 8.1% co‐expressed monoclonal gammopathy. These overlap patients had thrombotic complications and most had recurrences. Patients with multiple gammopathies of thrombotic significance may have several autoantibodies and constitute a high‐risk group.

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