AUTHOR=Monard Amaury , Castoldi Elisabetta , De Simone Ilaria , Wichapong Kanin , van Duijl Tirsa , van den Biggelaar Maartje , Spada Stefano , van Doorn William , Hellenbrand Dave , van der Meijden Paola , Swieringa Frauke , Stork Alexander , ten Cate Hugo , Beckers Erik , Heubel-Moenen Floor , Henskens Yvonne TITLE=Case Report: Laboratory detection of a thrombotic tendency in a family with hypodysfibrinogenemia and a novel FGG mutation JOURNAL=Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine VOLUME=11 YEAR=2024 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/cardiovascular-medicine/articles/10.3389/fcvm.2024.1488602 DOI=10.3389/fcvm.2024.1488602 ISSN=2297-055X ABSTRACT=Introduction

Hypodysfibrinogenemia is a rare congenital fibrinogen disorder (CFD) which may induce thrombotic and bleeding events. Therefore, patient management needs careful evaluation. Routine coagulation tests are inadequate to predict the clinical phenotype.

Clinical findings

A 60-year-old woman with both bleeding and thrombotic complications and her two daughters were referred to our center for genotypic and phenotypic analysis of a CFD.

Diagnosis

Conventional laboratory results led to the diagnosis of hypodysfibrinogenemia in all three subjects. They all carried the same heterozygous c.1124A>G mutation in FGG resulting in p.Tyr375Cys amino acid substitution, which was confirmed by protein variant analysis from plasma. In silico structure analysis predicted possible conformational and functional changes of the fibrinogen molecule. Thrombin generation indicated a hypercoagulable state confirmed by microfluidics that showed enhanced fibrin formation in both daughters, regardless of the coagulation trigger.

Conclusion

We report on a family with hypodysfibrinogenemia and a novel FGG heterozygous missense mutation, possibly leading to conformational changes or covalent dimerization. Thrombin generation and particularly microfluidic measurements disclosed a hypercoagulable state, which was not detected with routine coagulation tests, justifying a different patient management.