• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Familial Perinatal Liver Disease and Fetal Thrombotic Vasculopathy
  • Contributor: Ernst, Linda M.; Grossman, Andrew B.; Ruchelli, Eduardo D.
  • imprint: SAGE Publications, 2008
  • Published in: Pediatric and Developmental Pathology
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.2350/07-06-0301.1
  • ISSN: 1093-5266; 1615-5742
  • Keywords: General Medicine ; Pathology and Forensic Medicine ; Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>The association between placental fetal thrombotic vasculopathy (FTV) and perinatal liver disease was not recognized until 2002, when Dahms and colleagues reported a series of 3 patients in whom severe liver disease developed in the first 2 days of life. All had abnormal liver histology and showed a variety of abnormalities, including Budd-Chiari syndrome, changes mimicking extrahepatic obstruction, lobular fibrosis, cholestasis, and hepatocyte giant cell transformation. We report recurrent significant perinatal liver disease in a family, associated with proven FTV in at least 1 pregnancy. A 30-year-old gravida 4 female with a history of heterozygous methylenetetrahydrofolate A1298C mutation had a normal 1st pregnancy and then experienced an intrauterine fetal demise at 38 weeks of gestation. Placental examination revealed extensive occlusive and mural thrombi of chorionic vessels associated with a large focus of avascular villi. Histologic examination of the liver showed extensive giant cell transformation and hepatocyte dropout. No excess hemosiderin pigment was present in the liver, pancreas, or heart. A 3rd pregnancy produced a live-born term infant with transient neonatal cholestasis. The 4th pregnancy also produced a term neonate who presented with acute hepatic failure of unknown cause, ultimately requiring liver transplantation. Fetal thrombotic vasculopathy is an underrecognized association with perinatal liver disease that may be associated with abnormal liver perfusion and that may recur in families, especially when a genetic thrombophilia is present.</jats:p>