cystinosis
Cystinosis, also known as Abderhalden Kaufmann Lignac syndrome, is the most common hereditary cause of renal Fanconi syndrome. Cystinosis is one of the lysosomal storage disorders.
Epidemiology
It has a reported incidence of 1:192,000 . Cystinosis is typically diagnosed in infancy.
Clinical presentation
Cystinosis typically presents with failure to thrive and a Fanconi syndrome in early infancy. Progressive multi-organ involvement develops over the first few decades of life.
- renal manifestations
- Fanconi syndrome
- failure of renal tubular solute and water resorption leading to excess urinary solute excretion and a type 2 renal tubular acidosis
- progressive renal failure by 10 years of age
- calciuria leading to increased risk of renal calculi and osteomalacia
- Fanconi syndrome
- extra-renal manifestations
- ocular
- photophobia, blepharospasm from corneal involvement
- neuromuscular
- distal vacuolar myopathy presenting as progressive distal muscle wasting and weakness
- central nervous system
- hypotonia, speech delay, motor impairment, cognitive dysfunction have been described
- endocrine
- primary hypothyroidism
- pancreatic exocrine failure causing clinical diabetes mellitus by the age of 18 years in 50% of patients
- primary hypogonadism in males
- skin
- hypopigmentation, coarsened facial features, impaired sweating have been described
- ocular
There are three main clinical phenotypes:
- infantile form (95%)
- most severe with early-onset renal failure
- juvenile-onset form (5%)
- slower onset to renal failure and milder degrees of Fanconi syndrome
- adult form (case reports)
- corneal involvement with renal sparing
Pathology
Cystinosis is caused by a mutation of the CTNS gene, which is inherited in an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern. This gene encodes cystinosin, a transporter that carries cystine from lysosomes into the cytoplasm. A defect in the CTNS gene causes an accumulation of cystine in lysosomes, leading to cystine crystallization and resultant lysosomal dysfunction . Lysosomal dysfunction in cystinosis manifests across a variety of organ systems, most prominently in the renal system.
Radiographic features
Imaging features are non-specific and may include:
Treatment and prognosis
The mainstay of treatment is cystine-depleting therapy with cysteamine. With modern medical therapy, life expectancy can extend past 50 years.
History and etymology
Initially described by Swiss biochemist Emil Abderhalden (1877-1950) .