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Toddler With New Onset Diabetes and Atypical Hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome in the Setting of COVID-19

Faraz Alizadeh, Amanda O’Halloran, Areej Alghamdi, Charlotte Wang Chen, Maria Trissal, Avram Z. Traum, Danielle D. DeCourcey

2020PEDIATRICS26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This is a novel case of a 16-month-old boy with a history of prematurity with intrauterine growth restriction, severe failure to thrive, microcephaly, pachygyria, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and postnatal embolic stroke, who presented with new-onset diabetes mellitus with diabetic ketoacidosis in the setting of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection, with a course complicated by atypical hemolytic syndrome (aHUS). This patient demonstrated remarkable insulin resistance in the period before aHUS diagnosis, which resolved with the first dose of eculizumab therapy. There is increasing evidence that COVID-19 is associated with thrombotic disorders and that microangiopathic processes and complement-mediated inflammation may be implicated. In this case report, we describe a pediatric patient with COVID-19 and a new complement-mediated microangiopathic thrombotic disease. Because whole-exome sequencing and extensive workup returned without a clear etiology for aHUS, this is likely a COVID-19 triggered case of aHUS versus an idiopathic case that was unmasked by the infection.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAtypical hemolytic uremic syndromePediatricsEculizumabMicroangiopathic hemolytic anemiaFailure to thriveInternal medicineImmunologyThrombotic thrombocytopenic purpuraComplement systemPlateletAntibodyComplement system in diseasesNeonatal Health and BiochemistryCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies