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  • Title: Neutropenia, neutrophil dysfunction, and inflammatory bowel disease in glycogen storage disease type Ib: results of the European Study on Glycogen Storage Disease type I.
    Author: Visser G, Rake JP, Fernandes J, Labrune P, Leonard JV, Moses S, Ullrich K, Smit GP.
    Journal: J Pediatr; 2000 Aug; 137(2):187-91. PubMed ID: 10931410.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To investigate the incidence, the severity, and the course of neutropenia, neutrophil dysfunction, and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in glycogen storage disease (GSD) type Ib. METHOD: As part of a collaborative European Study on GSD type I, a retrospective registry was established in 12 European countries that included all patients with GSD-I who were known at the centers and were born from 1960 to 1995. Of a total of 288 patients with GSD-I, 57 who had GSD-Ib form the basis of this study. RESULTS: Neutropenia (defined as an absolute neutrophil count <1 x 10(9)/L) was found in 54 patients. In 64% of the patients neutropenia was documented before the age of 1 year, but in 18% of the patients neutropenia was first noted between the ages of 6 and 9 years. Neutropenia was persistent in 5 patients and intermittent without any clear cyclical course in 45. Neutrophil function was investigated in 18 patients with neutropenia and was abnormal in all. Perioral infections were reported in 37 patients, perianal infections in 27 patients, and protracted diarrhea in 23 patients. Findings on colonoscopy and radiologic studies in 10 of 20 patients suspected to have IBD were abnormal in all. All patients with IBD, perioral infections, and perianal infections had neutropenia. CONCLUSIONS: Intermittent severe neutropenia is frequently found in patients with GSD-Ib. The study also indicates that IBD in GSD-Ib is underdiagnosed; up to 77% of the patients studied had evidence of IBD, all of whom had neutropenia. IBD was not detected in those with normal neutrophil counts. These findings support the notion that neutropenia and/or neutrophil dysfunction in GSD-Ib and IBD are causally related.
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