Stem cell transplantation for osteopetrosis in patients beyond the age of 5 years.
Polina StepenskySigal GrisariuBatia AvniIrina ZaidmanBella ShadurOrly ElpelegMehtap SirinManfred HoenigCatharina SchuetzIngrid FurlanMeinrad BeerStephanie von HarsdorfDonald BunjesKlaus-Michael DebatinAnsgar S SchulzPublished in: Blood advances (2020)
Osteopetrosis (OP) is a rare disease caused by defective osteoclast differentiation or function. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is the only curative treatment available in the infantile "malignant" form of OP. Improved clinical and genetic diagnosis of OP has seen the emergence of a cohort of patients with less severe and heterogeneous clinical presentations. This intermediate form of OP does not call for urgent intervention, but patients accumulate debilitating skeletal complications over years and decades, which are severe enough to require curative treatment and may also require intermittent transfusion of blood products. Here we present data from 7 patients with intermediate OP caused by mutations in TCIRG1 (n = 2), CLCN7 (n = 2), RANK (n = 1), SNX10 (n = 1), and CA2 (n = 1), who were transplanted between the ages of 5 to 30 years (mean, 15; median, 12). Donors were matched siblings or family (n = 4), matched unrelated (n = 2), or HLA haploidentical family donors (n = 1). Conditioning was fludarabine and treosulfan based. All 6 patients transplanted from matched donors are currently alive with a follow-up period between 1 and 8 years at time of publication (median, 4 years) and have demonstrated a significant improvement in symptoms and quality of life. Patients with intermediate OP should be considered for HSCT.
Keyphrases
- stem cell transplantation
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- high dose
- physical activity
- machine learning
- patient reported outcomes
- early onset
- high intensity
- cardiac surgery
- electronic health record
- genome wide
- intellectual disability
- combination therapy
- hematopoietic stem cell