Although being overweight and/or obese aggravates the risk of cardiovascular disease, MS is already present in many young adolescents with T1DM of normal weight. It is necessary that MS risk factors are routinely evaluated in all diabetic adolescents, including those with an adequate BMI.
Deficient anterior pituitary with variable immune deficiency (DAVID) syndrome is a rare condition characterized by symptomatic ACTH deficiency and primary hypogammaglobulinemia, caused by pathogenic variants of the nuclear factor kappa-B subunit 2 (NF-κB2) gene. We report the case of a 9-yr-old boy diagnosed with common variable immunodeficiency at the age of 3, who is under monthly intravenous immunoglobulin. The patient was admitted twice to the pediatric emergency service at the age of 9 due to symptomatic hypoglycemic events. During the hypoglycemic crisis, serum cortisol was low (< 0.1 μg/dL), ACTH level was inappropriately low (4.4 ng/L) and the ACTH stimulation test failed to raise the blood cortisol level. Pituitary magnetic resonance imaging showed a hypoplastic pituitary. Other pituitary deficiencies, primary hyperinsulinism and other metabolic diseases were excluded. He started hydrocortisone replacement treatment while maintaining immunoglobulin substitution and he remains asymptomatic. Molecular analysis revealed the heterozygous nonsense pathogenic variant, c.2557C>T (Arg853Ter) in the NF-κB2 gene. Thus, symptomatic hypoglycemia in a child with primary immunodeficiency should raise the suspicion of DAVID syndrome, prompting NF-κB2 molecular analysis, to allow timely and appropriated therapy and genetic counseling.
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