We express our thanks to Dr. Cavoli for interest in our case [1] and shared experience of your case. A 60-year-old female with Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) suffered from azotemia with bilateral hydronephrosis within 2 years of initial diagnosis. Author regarded a metformin-associated lactic acidosis combined with azotemia as the cause of her presentations. Although nearly 10% of cases with metformin-associated lactic acidosis were met for all three criteria (i.e., arterial pH<7.35, blood lactate>5 mmol/L, and detectable plasma metformin concentration) [2], plasma metformin concentration was not given in this patient. In addition, fever, abdominal pain, and leukocytosis raised a possibility of urinary tract infection accompanied by azotemia.
Regardless of causality, a wait-and-see policy was possible after the correction of azotemia in this patient. Similarly, our patient did not any specific treatment for ECD until August 2012 (more than 4 years from initial detection of left renal mass) and did not any genito-urinary symptoms [3]. Therefore, a wait-and-see policy might be acceptable for asymptomatic ECD patients. Considering that interferon-α appeared to be effective against bilateral hydronephrosis [4], its response might be important to design a treatment strategy in this patient. Recently, 13 (54%) of 24 ECD patients harbored BRAF V600E mutation [5] and the identification of BRAF V600E mutation would provide a theoretical rationale for the use of BRAF inhibitors in patients with BRAF V600E-positive ECD with any symptoms or disease progression.