Biclonal Gammopathy of Iga Kappa Variant in a Patient with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Case Report

The association of systemic lupus erythematosus and multiple myeloma is an uncommon event. Biclonal gammopathy is a rare case, which accounts for only 1.5% of all myelomas but biclonal gammopathy of IgA kappa variant is extremely rare. We report this unusual case in which the simultaneous diagnosis of biclonal gammopathy of IgA kappa variants and systemic lupus erythematosus was made.

a rare combination of immunoglobulin (IgA/IgA Kappa) in a 56-year-old man and SLE.

Case Report
A 56-year-old man has a past medical history of renal failure (secondary to type 2 diabetes diagnosed 11 years before) manifesting fatigue, general weakness, undocumented weight loss, a photosensitive rash and intermittent arthralgias to the hospital. His temperature was 38.5 °C, heart rate was 72 beats/ min, and blood pressure was 135/85 mmHg. Physical examination revealed persistent malar erythema and transient indurated erythema on the upper extremities and trunk. He had non-erosive arthritis on shoulders, elbows, and knees. He did not present with swollen fingers, alopecia, lymphadenopathy or oral ulcers.
Complete blood count, blood biochemical parameters and auto-immune serologic test results are detailed in Table 1. Serum electrophoresis on agarose gel (Sebia) revealed two sharp discrete bands. Band-1 (10.21g/l) is seen in the Beta 2 region and Introduction It has been suggested that patients affected by autoimmune diseases are more prone to developing malignancies, and especially lymphoma [1]. Although the coexistence of multiple myeloma (MM) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has been described in humans, it remains extremely rare [1]. MM is characterized by the production of M protein.
The monoclonal protein is detected by serum protein electrophoresis as a single discrete band (M-band) most often in the gamma globulin region. However, it may rarely show a simultaneous presence of two distinct M-bands as seen in 1.5% of cases [2]. We report a case of simultaneous diagnosis of biclonal gammopathy with  [3].
Biclonal gammopathies are a vanishingly rare group characterized by the production of two distinct monoclonal proteins. This rare finding can result, for example from either a proliferation of two clones of plasma cells with each producing an unrelated monoclonal spike or from the production of two monoclonal spikes by a single clone of plasma cells. Approximately 1.5% of MM cases present with biclonal paraproteinemia [2].
IgA found selectively in the seromucous secretion, tears, saliva and GI secretions. IgA has two subclasses which are differentiated immunochemically as IgA1 and IgA2. Normally the serum contains approximately 90% of IgA1 molecules [7].

Conclusion
Our case report highlights an extremely rare clinical presentation of biclonal gammpathy of IgA kappa variant and SLE. The association of SLE and MM has rarely been studied so more research needs to be done in this regard so that the definite pathogenetic mechanisms involved can be established and the effective treatment guidelines could be devised.

Conflict of Interest
None of the authors has any conflict of interest to disclosure. Immunofixation performed on the urine demonstrated a kappa light chain not associated with IgA, IgG, or IgM heavy chains. Renal biopsy is not practiced. Red blood cells morphology showed anisocytosis and no rouloux formation. The bone marrow biopsy demonstrated normocellular marrow with a diffuse interstitial infiltrate of plasma cells comprising more than 30% of the marrow elements.
Autoimmune serologic test results showed positive tests for antinuclear antibodies (ANA) (title 1:640, homogenous pattern) and antibodies to double stranded DNA (dsDNA) (183AU/ml). Anti-Phospholipid (Antibeta-2-Glycoprotein, Anticardiolipin, Antiphosphatidic acid, Antiphosphatidyl inositol and Antiphosphatidyl serine) antibodies were negative (Table 1). SLE was diagnosed according to criteria for SLE set by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR). Based on the above, the simultaneous diagnosis of biclonal gammopathy of IgA kappa variants and systemic lupus erythematosus was made.

Discussion
Although monoclonal gammopathy is often detected in SLE patients the coexistence of MM has rarely been reported. The prevalence of monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) in SLE patients varies from 2.2% to 3.3% and the outcome of these patients seems not to differ from the other SLE patients [3].
MM possibly diagnosed roughly a decade after the diagnosis of SLE is made, but it may be diagnosed simultaneously as in our case or even the MM precedes the diagnosis of SLE. A careful literature review confirms that the association of these two diseases has been reported only in a few cases. Pehamberger, Sendagorta, Vaiopoulos and Humayun diagnosed SLE and MM simultaneously [3][4][5][6]. To our knowledge, this is the first ever-reported case with biclonal gammopathy of IgA kappa variant and simultaneous SLE.
The pathogenesis of the association between these two disorders is mainly speculative. The genetic factors have been claimed to play a role in the pathogenesis, while some other researchers think that it is the prolonged use of immunosuppressant drugs in previously diagnosed SLE patients which causes MM to