CD68-Negative Histiocytoses with Cardiac Involvement, Associated with COVID-19

Histiocytoses are rare diseases characterised by infiltration of affected organs by myeloid cells with a monocyte or dendritic cell phenotype. Symptoms can range from self-resolving localised forms to multisystemic lesions requiring specific treatment. To demonstrate extremely rare cases of CD68-neg...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of molecular sciences 2024-09, Vol.25 (18), p.10086
Hauptverfasser: Mitrofanova, Lubov, Korneva, Lubov, Makarov, Igor, Bortsova, Maria, Sitnikova, Maria, Ryzhkova, Daria, Kudlay, Dmitry, Starshinova, Anna
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Histiocytoses are rare diseases characterised by infiltration of affected organs by myeloid cells with a monocyte or dendritic cell phenotype. Symptoms can range from self-resolving localised forms to multisystemic lesions requiring specific treatment. To demonstrate extremely rare cases of CD68-negative cardiac histiocytosis with expression of SARS-CoV-2 antigen in infiltrate cells. We demonstrated a case of Erdheim-Chester disease in a 67-year-old man with pericardial involvement and positive dynamics with vemurafenib treatment, an autopsy case of xanthogranulomatous myopericarditis in a 63-year-old man, surgical material of xanthogranulomatous constrictive pericarditis in a 57-year-old man, and an autopsy case of xanthogranulomatosis in a 1-month-old girl. In all cases, xanthogranuloma cells expressed CD163, many of them spike protein SARS-CoV-2, while CD68 expression was detected only in single cells. In this article, we demonstrated four cases of extremely rare CD68-negative cardiac xanthogranulomatosis in three adults and one child with expression of the spike protein SARS-CoV-2 in M2 macrophages. This potential indirect association between COVID-19 and the development of histiocytosis in these patients warrants further investigation. To substantiate this hypothesis, more extensive research is needed.
ISSN:1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms251810086