A286 MYO5B MUTATIONS AS A CAUSE OF CHOLESTASIS IN A CHILD WITHOUT MICROVILLOUS INCLUSION DISEASE
Doaa M Fahmy, Binita M Kamath

TL;DR
A child with MYO5B mutations developed cholestatic liver disease without intestinal symptoms, expanding the known effects of this gene.
Contribution
This case is the first to report MYO5B mutations causing cholestasis without intestinal disease.
Findings
The patient showed cholestasis with normal GGT and a PFIC-like liver biopsy.
MYO5B mutations were identified without mutations in ABCB11 or ATP8B1.
The case suggests MYO5B may affect bile transport in the liver similarly to intestinal protein trafficking.
Abstract
Biallelic Myosin Vb (MYO5B) mutations are identified in the majority of patients with microvillus inclusion disease (MVID) that requires life-long parenteral nutrition and eventually cholestatic liver disease. Biallelic MYO5B mutations have also been reported in a few children with predominant early-onset cholestatic liver disease. To report on a patient with MYO5B mutations and progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis PFIC-like phenotype and normal serum GGT without intestinal disease. We describe a 2-year and 8-month-old girl, who is the first child of healthy non- consanguineous parents from the Phillipines with no family history of liver disease. She presented at the age of 10 months for evaluation of mild jaundice, which was noticed at the age of 6 months. Other symptoms included pruritus, slowly weight gain, intermittent pale stools and dark urine. Laboratory investigations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal and related cancers · Genetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases · Pediatric Hepatobiliary Diseases and Treatments
