Abstract
Background Heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1) catalyzes the metabolism of heme into carbon monoxide, ferrous iron, and biliverdin. Through biliverdin reductase, biliverdin becomes bilirubin. HMOX1 -deficiency is an exceedingly rare autosomal recessive disorder with hallmark features of direct antibody negative hemolytic anemia with normal bilirubin, hyperinflammation and features indicating hemophagocytosis lymphohistiocytosis. Clinical findings have included asplenia, nephritis, hepatitis, and evidence of vasculitis. Pulmonary features and evaluation of the immune response have been limited. Results Here, we present the fifth reported case in literature of a young boy who remarkably also presented with chronic respiratory failure due to nonspecific interstitial pneumonia in addition to infection-triggered recurrent hyperinflammatory flares notable for hemolysis without hyperbilirubinemia, immunodeficiency, hepatomegaly with mild transaminitis, asplenia, leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, joint pain and features of macrophage activation with negative autoimmune serologies. Lung biopsy revealed cholesterol granulomas. He was found post-mortem by whole exome sequencing to have a compound heterozygous paternal frame shift a paternal frame shift HMOX1 c.264delCTGG (p.L89Sfs*24) and maternal splice donor HMOX1 (c.636+2 T>A) consistent with HMOX1 deficiency. Western blot analysis confirmed lack of HMOX1 protein upon oxidant stimulation of the patient cells. Conclusions Here, we describe a phenotype expansion for HMOX1-deficiency to include not only asplenia and hepatomegaly, but also interstitial lung disease with cholesterol granulomas and inflammatory flares with hemophagocytosis present in the bone marrow.