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Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome: A study on 577 patients defining the genotype as a predictive biomarker for disease severity.

Tanja C ValléeJannik S GlasmacherHannes BuchnerPeter D ArkwrightUta BehrendsAnastasiia BondarenkoMichael J BrowningDavid K BuchbinderAlessandro CattoniLiudmyla ChernyshovaPeter CiznarTheresa ColeWojciech CzogałaGregor DueckersJohn David M EdgarFatih ErbeyAnders FasthFrancesca FerruaRenata FormankovaEleonora GambineriAndrew R GenneryFrederick D GoldmanLuis Ignacio González-GranadoCarsten HeilmannTarja Heiskanen-KosmaHanna JunttiLeena KainulainenHirokazu KaneganeNeslihan E KaracaSara Sebnem KilicChristoph KleinSylwia KoltanIrina KondratenkoIsabelle MeytsGulnara M NasrullayevaLucia Dora NotarangeloSrdjan PasicIsabelle PellierClaudio PignataSiraj Ahmed MisbahAnsgar S SchulzGesmar Rs SegundoAnna ShcherbinaMary A SlatterRobert SokolicPere Soler-PalacinPolina StepenskyJoris M van MontfransSamppa Johannes RyhänenBeata Wolska-KuśnierzJohn B ZieglerXiaodong ZhaoAlessandro AiutiHans D OchsMichael H Albert
Published in: Blood (2024)
WAS is a multifaceted monogenic disorder with a broad disease spectrum and variable disease severity and a variety of treatment options including allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and gene therapy (GT). No reliable biomarker exists to predict disease course and outcome for individual patients. A total of 577 patients with a WAS variant from 26 countries and a median follow-up of 8.9 years (0.3-71.1), totaling 6118 patient-years, were included in this international retrospective study. Overall survival (OS) of the cohort (censored at HSCT or GT) was 82% (95% CI 78-87) at 15 years and 70% (61-80) at 30 years of age. The type of variant was predictive of outcome: patients with a missense variant in exons 1 or 2 or with the intronic hotspot variant c.559+5G>A (class I variants) had a 15-year OS of 93% (89-98) and a 30-year OS of 91% (86-97), compared to 71% (62-81) and 48% (34-68) in patients with any other variant (class II; p<0.0001). The cumulative incidence rates of disease-related complications such as severe bleeding (p=0.007), life-threatening infection (p<0.0001), and autoimmunity (p=0.004) occurred significantly later in patients with a class I variant. The cumulative incidence of malignancy (p=0.6) was not different between classes I and II. This study represents the largest cohort of WAS patients studied so far. It confirms the spectrum of disease severity and quantifies the risk for specific disease-related complications. The class of variant is a biomarker to predict the outcome for WAS patients.
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