| Literature DB >> 30770395 |
Ferras Alwan1, Chiara Vendramin2, Ri Liesner3, Amanda Clark4, William Lester5, Tina Dutt6, William Thomas7, Richard Gooding8, Tina Biss9, H G Watson10, Nichola Cooper11, Rachel Rayment12, Tanya Cranfield13, Joost J van Veen14, Quentin A Hill15, Sarah Davis16, Jayashree Motwani17, Neha Bhatnagar18, Nicole Priddee19, Marianna David20, Maeve P Crowley21, Jayanthi Alamelu22, Hamish Lyall23, John-Paul Westwood1, Mari Thomas1,24, Marie Scully1,24.
Abstract
Congenital thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (cTTP) is an ultra-rare thrombomicroangiopathy caused by an inherited deficiency of a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with a thrombospondin type 1 motif, member 13 (ADAMTS13). There are limited data on genotype-phenotype correlation; there is no consensus on treatment. We reviewed the largest cohort of cTTP cases, diagnosed in the United Kingdom, over the past 15 years. Seventy-three cases of cTTP were diagnosed, confirmed by genetic analysis. Ninety-three percent were alive at the time of review. Thirty-six percent had homozygous mutations; 64% had compound heterozygous mutations. Two presentation peaks were seen: childhood (median diagnosis age, 3.5 years) and adulthood, typically related to pregnancy (median diagnosis age, 31 years). Genetic mutations differed by age of onset with prespacer mutations more likely to be associated with childhood onset (P = .0011). Sixty-nine percent of adult presentations were associated with pregnancy. Fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) and intermediate purity factor VIII concentrate were used as treatment. Eighty-eight percent of patients with normal blood counts, but with headaches, lethargy, or abdominal pain, reported symptom resolution with prophylactic therapy. The most common currently used regimen of 3-weekly FFP proved insufficient for 70% of patients and weekly or fortnightly infusions were required. Stroke incidence was significantly reduced in patients receiving prophylactic therapy (2% vs 17%; P = .04). Long-term, there is a risk of end-organ damage, seen in 75% of patients with late diagnosis of cTTP. In conclusion, prespacer mutations are associated with earlier development of cTTP symptoms. Prophylactic ADAMTS13 replacement decreases the risk of end-organ damage such as ischemic stroke and resolved previously unrecognized symptoms in patients with nonovert disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30770395 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2018-11-884700
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113