Abstract

Pediatric acute liver failure (PALF) remains an enigmatic process of rapid end-organ dysfunction associated with a variety of pathologic conditions though the predominant cause is indeterminate. A growing body of research has identified mutations in the NBAS gene to be associated with recurrent acute liver failure and multi-systemic disease including short stature, skeletal dysplasia, facial dysmorphism, immunologic abnormalities, and Pelger-Huët anomaly. Here, we describe a 4-year-old girl who presented with dehydration in the setting of acute gastroenteritis and fever but went on to develop PALF on day 2 of hospitalization. She clinically recovered with supportive measures, but after discharge, had at least 2 additional episodes of PALF. Ultimately, she underwent liver transplant and her recurrent episodes of PALF did not recur throughout a 6-year follow-up period. Whole-exome sequencing post-liver transplant initially revealed two variants of uncertain significance in the NBAS gene. Parental studies confirmed the c.1549C>T(p.R517C; now likely pathogenic) variant from her mother and a novel c.4646T>C(p.L1549P) variant from her father. In silico analyses predicted these variants to have a deleterious effect on protein function. Consistent with previously characterized NBAS mutation-associated disease (NMAD), our patient demonstrated the following features: progeroid facial features, hypoplasia of the 12th ribs, Pelger-Huët anomaly on peripheral blood smear, and abnormal B and NK cell function. Altogether, we describe a novel pathogenic variant in the NBAS gene of a patient with NMAD and report the resolution of recurrent PALF secondary to NMAD following liver transplantation.

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