Thrombocytopenia-12 with or without myopathy (THC12) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by congenital thrombocytopenia apparent from infancy or early childhood. Most affected individuals have bleeding episodes, including petechiae, easy bruising, epistaxis, hematomas, menorrhagia, and increased bleeding after trauma or surgery, although rare patients may have thrombocytopenia without bleeding. Platelets are enlarged (macrothrombocytopenia), and there is an increase of circulating immature platelets, consistent with increased production. Patient platelets show hyposialylation due to GNE mutations, which causes increased removal of platelets from the circulation, shortened platelet lifespan, and resultant thrombocytopenia. In contrast to the thrombocytopenia, which is present since birth or early childhood, features of myopathy usually do not develop until the mid-twenties, similar to Nonaka myopathy (summary by Zhen et al., 2014, Izumi et al., 2014; Bottega et al., 2022).
For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of thrombocytopenia, see THC1 (313900). [from OMIM]
- MedGen UID:
- 1861803
- •Concept ID:
- C5935593
- •
- Disease or Syndrome