| Literature DB >> 30283912 |
Philostratos Klidaras1, Jacqueline Severt2, Deborah Aggers3, Jason Payne4, Paul D Miller5, Steven W Ing6.
Abstract
Infants and children with hypophosphatasia (HPP) treated with asfotase alfa show improvement in bone mineralization and motor function, but it is unclear whether the medication can affect fracture healing in adult HPP patients. We present the course of fracture healing in two adults with HPP on enzyme replacement. Case 1 is a 41-year-old female with infantile-onset HPP who was wheelchair-bound due to a nonhealing tibial fragility fracture sustained 3 years before and also had nonhealing femoral pseudofracture sustained 17 years before starting asfotase alfa therapy in December 2015. One month after medication initiation, she underwent elective osteotomy of tibia and fibula with intramedullary nail fixation. After 3 months of enzyme replacement, she was full weight-bearing and radiographs demonstrated callus formation at osteotomy sites, and at 11 months of therapy, radiographs showed union of the osteotomies. By 11 months of asfotase alfa therapy, there was near resolution of the femoral pseudofracture without interval surgery at this site. Case 2 is a 61-year-old male who showed nonunion of a fragility fracture of the right femur 8 years prior, intramedullary nail fixation 6 years prior, and stress fracture of the left femoral diaphysis sustained 1 year before starting asfotase alfa in October 2015. A trial of teriparatide was unsuccessful in healing of these fractures. On asfotase alfa, radiographs revealed interval healing of the left femur fracture after 12 months and complete healing of the right femur fracture and near resolution of the left femur fracture after 16 months of medical therapy. These two adult patients with HPP showed significant clinical and radiographic improvements in a total of four recalcitrant fractures on enzyme replacement therapy with asfotase alfa.Entities:
Keywords: ASFOTASE ALFA; FRACTURE; HYPOPHOSPHATASIA
Year: 2018 PMID: 30283912 PMCID: PMC6139700 DOI: 10.1002/jbm4.10052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JBMR Plus ISSN: 2473-4039
Figure 1Case 1: Radiograph series of left tibia‐fibula after osteotomy and intramedullary nail (IMN) fixation. (A) Three years after left tibial fracture; before replacement therapy and operative treatment. (B) One month after elective osteotomy; 2 months after asfotase alfa initiation. Some callus formation at the osteotomy site. (C) Five months post‐op; 6 months on medication. Definite increase in callus formation. (D) Ten months post‐op; 11 months on medication. Tibial and fibular osteotomies appear to have gone on to union.
Figure 2Case 1: Radiograph series of right subtrochanteric femoral pseudofracture. (A) Right femur pseudofracture 12 years after identification; before asfotase alfa treatment. (B) Stable 17 years after fracture; 1 month before asfotase alfa therapy. (C) Eleven months of uninterrupted asfotase alfa treatment; radiograph demonstrates progressive healing of femoral pseudofracture. (D) Fourteen months on medication; continued bone healing.
Figure 3Case 2: Radiograph series of left and right femoral fractures. (A) Right femur 9 years after fracture; before asfotase alfa treatment. (B) Left femur; before asfotase alfa treatment. (C) Right and (D) left femur 16 months on medication.