Thromb Haemost 2003; 90(05): 893-897
DOI: 10.1160/TH03-02-0120
Platelets and Blood Cells
Schattauer GmbH

Paris-Trousseau syndrome : clinical, hematological, molecular data of ten new cases

Remi Favier
1   Service d’Hématologie Biologique, Hôpital d’enfants A. Trousseau, Paris, France
,
Katayoun Jondeau
2   Département d’Hématologie, Institut Cochin, Paris et Faculté de Médecine Paris-Ile de France-Ouest
,
Patrice Boutard
3   Services de Pédiatrie Hématologique, Caen, Créteil, France
,
Paul Grossfeld
4   University of California, San Diego, USA
,
Philippe Reinert
3   Services de Pédiatrie Hématologique, Caen, Créteil, France
,
Christopher Jones
5   Royal London Medical School, London, UK
,
Francesco Bertoni
5   Royal London Medical School, London, UK
,
Elisabeth M. Cramer
2   Département d’Hématologie, Institut Cochin, Paris et Faculté de Médecine Paris-Ile de France-Ouest
› Author Affiliations

Financial support: Remi Favier is partly supported by the French Society of Pediatric Pathology. Francesco Bertoni is supported by the Swiss Cancer League (BIL KFS 00921-09-1999, 1045-08-2000).
Further Information

Publication History

Received 26 February 2003

Accepted after revision 01 July 2003

Publication Date:
05 December 2017 (online)

Preview

Summary

Paris-Trousseau syndrome (PTS) is an inherited disorder char-acterized by mild hemorragic tendency associated with 11q chromosome deletion. Here we report ten new patients (5 boys,5 girls) with complete clinical history, biological data, ultra-structural and molecular investigations. Thrombocytopenia is chronic in all the patients except two boys in whom it disappeared during the two first years of life. On Romanovsky stained peripheral blood smears, abnormal platelets with giant granules were detected in all the children and confirmed by electron microscopy (EM). On bone marrow smears, dysmega-karyopoiesis with many micromegakaryocytes was constantly observed. Abnormal alpha-granules were virtually absent from bone marrow and cultured megakaryocytes, while EM detected numerous images of granule fusion within blood platelets. Molecular analyses evidenced that the fli-1 gene is deleted in all the patients except one confirming the crucial role of the transcription factor FLI-1 in megakaryopoiesis. In summary, this study documents ten new cases of PTS with characteristic alpha-granule abnormalities, and shows the putative pathogenic role of fli-1 gene in the pathophysiology of this syndrome.