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ID 62248
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Kageyama, Misaki Department of General Medicine, Osaka University Hospital
Hagiya, Hideharu Department of General Medicine, Osaka University Hospital ORCID Kaken ID researchmap
Ueda, Yasutaka Department of Hematology and Oncology, Osaka University Hospital
Ohtani, Katsuki The Japanese Association for Complement Research
Fukumori, Yasuo Department of Molecular Genetics, Wakayama Medical University
Inoue, Norimitsu The Japanese Association for Complement Research
Wakamiya, Nobutaka The Japanese Association for Complement Research
Yoneda, Nanoka Laboratory for Clinical Investigation, Osaka University Hospital
Kimura, Keigo Laboratory for Clinical Investigation, Osaka University Hospital
Nagasawa, Motonori Department of General Medicine, Osaka University Hospital
Nakagami, Futoshi Department of General Medicine, Osaka University Hospital
Nishi, Isao Laboratory for Clinical Investigation, Osaka University Hospital
Sugimoto, Ken Department of General Medicine, Osaka University Hospital
Rakugi, Hiromi Department of General Medicine, Osaka University Hospital
Abstract
Rationale: Complement deficiency are known to be predisposed to disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI). We herein present a case of DGI involving a Japanese man who latently had a complement 7 deficiency with compound heterozygous variants.
Patient concerns: A previously healthy 51-year-old Japanese man complained of sudden-onset high fever. Physical examination revealed various skin lesions including red papules on his trunk and extremities, an impetigo-like pustule on left forearm, and tendinitis of his right forefinger.
Diagnosis: Blood culture testing detected gram-negative cocci, which was confirmed to be Neisseria gonorrhoeae based on mass spectrometry and a pathogen-specific PCR test.
Interventions: Screening tests for underlying immunocompromised factors uncovered that complement activities (CH50) was undetectable. With a suspicion of a congenital complement deficiency, genetic analysis revealed rare single nucleotide variants in complement 7 (C7), including c.281-1G>T and a novel variant c.1454C>T (p.A485V). CH50 was normally recovered by adding purified human C7 to the patient's serum, supporting that the patient has C7 deficiency with compound heterozygous variants.
Outcomes: Under a diagnosis of DGI, the patient underwent an antibiotic treatment with cefotaxime for a week and was discharged without any sequela.
Lessons: DGI is a rare sexually-transmitted infection that potentially induces systemic complications. Complement immunity usually defeats N. gonorrhoeae and prevents the organism from causing DGI. This case highlighted the importance of suspecting a complement deficiency when a person develops DGI.
Keywords
complement addition test
complement deficiency
disseminated gonococcal infection
genome analysis
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
sexually transmitted infection
Published Date
2021-04-02
Publication Title
Medicine
Volume
volume100
Issue
issue13
Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Start Page
e25265
ISSN
0025-7974
Content Type
Journal Article
language
English
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
Copyright Holders
© 2021 the Author(s).
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isVersionOf https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000025265
License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Funder Name
Japanese Association for Complement Research - Alexion GK
CSL Behring K. K.