Rapola Juhani, Heikkilä Päivi, Fellman Vineta
Department of Pathology, Hospital for Children and Adolscents, University Central Hospital and University of Helsinki, Finland.
Pediatr Pathol Mol Med. 2002 Mar-Apr;21(2):183-93. doi: 10.1080/15227950252852087.
Autopsy study of 17 newborn infants with lethal autosomal recessive disease presenting as growth retardation with lactic acidosis, Fanconi aminoaciduria, and hepatic hemosiderosis is reported. The patients succumbed between day 1 and 4 months of life; 9 patients died within the first month. All patients showed severe pathologic changes of liver with cholestasis in all livers. Extensive accumulation of stainable iron of the hepatocytes was present in 9/17 autopsy tissues and in two biopsy specimens. Moderate to abundant iron storage in the Kupffer cells was seen in all liver specimens. The amount of hepatocytic iron was high in livers up to 1 month of age and decreased thereafter. The general features and liver findings of this disorder suggest the name Growth Retardation Aminoaciduria Cholestasis Iron Overload, Lactacidosis and Early Death (GRACILE, OMIM 603358). Calcified concrements were seen in the medulla of 13/16 kidney specimens. Pancreas of 13/14 patients showed interstitial fibrosis and exocrine atrophy. Various pathologic findings such as renal tubular dysgenesis, paucity of hepatic bile ducts and iron storage in the macrophages of spleen and pulmonary alveoli were observed in some cases. Previous extensive clinical genetic and laboratory investigations have revealed that the patients had a previously unrecognized genetic disease. It is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. The gene locus is 2q33-37. The basic defect of the disease remains unknown.