Litcius/Paper detail

Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome

Cécile Daccord, Jean‐Marc Good, Marie‐Anne Morren, Olivier Bonny, Daniel Hohl, Romain Lazor

2020European Respiratory Review97 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, encoding the protein folliculin. Its clinical expression typically includes multiple pulmonary cysts, recurrent spontaneous pneumothoraces, cutaneous fibrofolliculomas and renal tumours of various histological types. BHD has no sex predilection and tends to manifest in the third or fourth decade of life. Multiple bilateral pulmonary cysts are found on chest computed tomography in >80% of patients and more than half experience one or more episodes of pneumothorax. A family history of pneumothorax is an important clue, which suggests the diagnosis of BHD. Unlike other cystic lung diseases such as lymphangioleiomyomatosis and pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis, BHD does not lead to progressive loss of lung function and chronic respiratory insufficiency. Renal tumours affect about 30% of patients during their lifetime, and can be multiple and recurrent. The diagnosis of BHD is based on a combination of genetic, clinical and/or skin histopathological criteria. Management mainly consists of early pleurodesis in the case of pneumothorax, periodic renal imaging for tumour detection, and diagnostic work-up in search of BHD in relatives of the index patient.

Topics & Concepts

Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndromeFolliculinMedicinePneumothoraxLymphangioleiomyomatosisPleurodesisLungPathologyPulmonary function testingGermline mutationRadiologyInternal medicineMutationGeneBiochemistryChemistryRenal cell carcinoma treatmentTuberous Sclerosis Complex ResearchGenetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases