A rare case report: multiple intrahepatic masses in a pediatric patient with citrin deficiency
Hui Lin, Hong Jiang, Qiang Chen, Xiang Pan, Mei Deng, Xiang-Ran Cai, Yuan-Zhi Lu, Yuan-Zong Song, Jun-Cheng Liu

TL;DR
A child with citrin deficiency developed hepatoblastoma, a rare liver cancer, suggesting a possible link between the two conditions.
Contribution
This is the first reported case of hepatoblastoma in a pediatric patient with citrin deficiency.
Findings
The patient had multiple intrahepatic masses and elevated AFP levels, leading to a hepatoblastoma diagnosis.
Hepatoblastoma recurred rapidly after initial treatment, resulting in the patient's death.
This case raises the possibility of an association between citrin deficiency and hepatoblastoma in children.
Abstract
Deficiency of citrin, the liver-type aspartate-glutamate carrier, arises from biallelic mutations of the gene SLC25A13. Although citrin deficiency (CD) is associated with higher risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in adult patients, this association remains inconclusive in pediatric cases. The patient in this paper had been diagnosed to have CD by SLC25A13 analysis at the age 10 months, and then in response to dietary therapy, her prolonged jaundice and marked hepatosplenomegaly resolved gradually. However, she was referred to the hospital once again due to recurrent abdominal distention for 2 weeks at her age 4 years and 9 months, when prominently enlarged liver and spleen were palpated, along with a strikingly elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) level of 27605 ng/mL as well as a large mass in the right liver lobe and a suspected tumor thrombus within the portal vein on enhanced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetabolism and Genetic Disorders · Cancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism · Amino Acid Enzymes and Metabolism
