AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common cancer in children, often showing symptoms like fever and anemia; however, this case presents a unique instance in which a 9-year-old boy only exhibited polyuria.
  • Tests indicated nephrogenic diabetes insipidus rather than primary kidney disease, and a renal biopsy confirmed the presence of lymphocytic infiltration.
  • The case emphasizes that unusual presentations, such as renal diabetes insipidus, in ALL patients should raise suspicion for hematological issues, highlighting the importance of timely bone marrow analysis.

Article Abstract

Background: Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is the most common pediatric malignancy, characterized by fever, anemia, hemorrhage, and symptoms brought on by blasts infiltrating organs.

Case Presentation: This is a case report of a 9-year-old Asian patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who presented with polyuria alone as a presenting feature without any other clinical manifestation; primary renal disease or inherited metabolic disease was highly suspected. However, the water deprivation test and water deprivation pressurization test suggested nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, and the renal biopsy displayed diffuse lymphocytic infiltration in the renal interstitium. Bone marrow aspiration was performed immediately, and a comprehensive diagnosis of B-lymphoblastic leukemia was finally made.

Conclusions: Renal infiltration with leukemic blasts mostly remains asymptomatic, but our case suggests that it can present with nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. This case fully demonstrates that the presentation of extramedullary infiltration in acute lymphoblastic leukemia is varied. When the patient has renal diabetes insipidus as the first symptom, the possibility of hematological tumor infiltration should be considered when finding the cause, and timely bone marrow cytology should be performed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11373453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13256-024-04710-0DOI Listing

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