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Chinese Journal of Hepatic Surgery(Electronic Edition) ›› 2023, Vol. 12 ›› Issue (06): 681-687. doi: 10.3877/cma.j.issn.2095-3232.2023.06.017

• Clinical Research • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Alagille syndrome misdiagnosed as congenital biliary atresia: a case report and literature review

Dingwei Xu, Jiangyun Ma, Xincheng Li, Jie Huang()   

  1. Department of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, Second Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University, Kunming 650101, China
  • Received:2023-07-27 Online:2023-12-10 Published:2023-11-23
  • Contact: Jie Huang

Abstract:

Objective

To investigate clinical characteristics, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of Alagille syndrome (ALGS).

Methods

Clinical data of 1 child with ALGS misdiagnosed as congenital biliary atresia undergoing surgery in the Second Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University in February 2022 were retrospectively analyzed. The boy, aged 10 years and 9 months, was admitted and diagnosed with "congenital biliary atresia" in our hospital in November 2021 due to "repeated yellow skin complicated with itching for more than 10 years and then aggravated for 1 week". Physical examination showed significant developmental disorder, small head circumference, prominent forehead, moderate hypertelorism, pointed chin and limb joint deformity. The liver was tender and palpable 3 cm below the right costal margin. ALT, AST, TB, DB, ALP, GGT levels and other liver function indexes were increased to varying degrees. MRCP showed that intrahepatic bile duct branches were unclear, no dilatation was found and extrahepatic bile ducts were thin. The possibility of specific cholangitis was considered. Ultrasound examination indicated the signs of thin bile ducts and liver injury. ERCP showed linear stenosis of common bile duct and cystic dilatation of common hepatic duct. Relevant studies of pediatric ALGS were searched from Wanfang Data, Chongqing VIP, CNKI, PubMed and MEDLINE and subject to literature review.

Results

On November 25, 2021, the patient underwent biliary stent implantation, and developed severe abdominal pain at postoperative 3 d. The biliary stent was emergently removed and PTCD was performed simultaneously. After multi-disciplinary team consultation, the whole-exome capture for targeted high-throughput sequencing detected c.439C>T (p.Q147*) mutation of JAG1 gene, and heterozygous nonsense mutation in the coding region of JAG1 gene, leading to the change of codon 147 of JAG1 gene from coding glutamine to stop codon. According to JAG1 gene mutation in combination with protruded forehead, two typical manifestations of hypertelorism and chronic cholestasis, the diagnosis of ALGS was confirmed.

Conclusions

ALGS is extremely rare in clinical practice, which is likely to be missed diagnosis and misdiagnosed. Clinical prognosis is relatively poor. With widespread application of genetic testing, more Alagille syndrome patients can be diagnosed accurately. Most patients die of heart disease or severe hepatitis. No effective treatment is available. Symptomatic treatment is mainly adopted. Liver transplantation is probably the optimal procedure.

Key words: Alagille syndrome, Congenital biliary atresia, Diagnosis, Treatment, JAG1 gene

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