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Sattler, E. C. and Steinlein, Ortrud K. (2018): Delayed diagnosis of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome due to marked intrafamilial clinical variability: a case report. In: BMC Medical Genetics 19:45 [PDF, 652kB]

Abstract

Background: Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome is a genetic syndrome caused by mutations in the FLCN gene. The main symptoms are lung bullae and pneumothorax, benign and malignant kidney tumors, and facial fibrofolliculoma. The risk of pneumothorax is considerable between ages 20-40 years, but decreases markedly after this age range and first-time pneumothorax after age 50 years is rare. Fibrofolliculomas usually occur between ages 35 and 45 years, while the risk for kidney cancer increases steadily with age, starting in young adulthood. However, we demonstrate here that within the same family patients might develop symptoms significantly before or after the usual age range, obscuring the typical clinical pattern and delaying diagnosis. Case presentation: The 43 year old index patient had a history of lung bullae and recurrent pneumothoraces starting 14 years earlier. His father (age 83 years) and one of the paternal uncles experienced their first pneumothorax unusually late after the age of 60 years. The uncle subsequently had four more pneumothoraces, and was diagnosed with kidney in his early 70s. Considerable differences in age of onset were also observed with regard to facial fibrofolliculomas that both paternal uncles developed very early around age 20 years, but which the father only started to show in his eighth decade. Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome was finally diagnosed when the index patient started to develop fibrofolliculomas within the typical age range. Conclusions: The family described here illustrates that Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome can be difficult to recognize, if presenting with considerable intrafamilial clinical variability. With a life-time kidney cancer risk of about 14-35% the consequences of delayed diagnosis might be grave for the affected family members. The possibility of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome should therefore be taken into consideration in apparently sporadic patients presenting with lung bullae and pneumothorax.

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