| Literature DB >> 31888683 |
Ataf Hussain Sabir1, Trevor Cole2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rare bone diseases account for 5% of all birth defects yet very few have personalised treatments. Developments in genetic diagnosis, molecular techniques and treatment technologies however, are leading to unparalleled therapeutic advance. This review explores the evolving therapeutic landscape of genetic skeletal disorders (GSDs); the key conditions and there key differentials.Entities:
Keywords: Bone; Dysplasia; Genetic; Hereditary; Personalised; Rare; Skeletal; Targeted; Therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31888683 PMCID: PMC6937740 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-019-1222-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Flow diagram illustrating search strategy
FGFR3 gene related skeletal disorders and relative differences
| FGFR3 Spectrum disorders | ||
|---|---|---|
| Thanatotrophic Dysplasia | Achondroplasia | Hypochondroplasia |
Perinatally Lethal Severely disproportionate limb short stature, narrow chest with short ribs, underdeveloped lungs, macrocephaly, | Reduced lifespan* (see above text) Disproportionate limb short stature, brachydactyly, macrocephaly with prominent forehead, mid-facial hypoplasia,flattened nasal bridge, kyphosis / lordosis, varus / valgus deformities | Normal Lifespan Mild disproportionate limb short stature, increased head circumference, normal facies. |
| Commonest mutation(s); R248C and K650E [ | G380R | N540K |
Summary of treatment advances for Achondroplasia
| Drug (Developer) | Type | Mechanism | Route | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vosorotide (Biomarin) | Small molecule peptide (CNP analogue) | Acts through NPR2 receptor to block MAPK pathway | Subcutaneous daily injection | 3 |
| TransCon CNP (Ascendis Pharma) | Small molecule peptide (CNP analogue) with TransCon carrier | Acts through NRPB1 receptor to block MAPK pathway | Subcutaneous weekly injection | 2 (Q3 2019) |
| TA-46 (Therachon AG) soon to be known as Recifercept (Pfizer) | FGFR3 receptor decoy | Decreases FGFR3 activation | Oral | 1 (2018) |
| Meclozine | H1 antagonist | Unclear (?MEK-ERK inhibition) | Oral | Preclinical studies completed |
| Infigratinib (QED therapeutics) | Small molecule TKI inhibitor | FGFR3 selective TKI | Oral | Preclinical studies completed. |
Fig. 2Rugger Jersey Spine in Osteopetrosis. Images taken from radiopedia.org under creative commons license 3.0 [32]
Fig. 3HPP mechanism of disease. Image used under the creative commons attribution license 3.0 from Bowden et al. [69]
Summary of key bone tumour conditions and emerging therapies
| HME | MC | Ollier | Maffucci | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Incidence | Relatively common (1 in 50,000) | Rare (< 100 cases reported) | 1/100,000 (commonest enchondromatosis subtype) [ | Rare (160 reported cases) |
| Inheritance | AD | AD | Sporadic / Somatic | Sporadic / Somatic |
| Genes | EXT1 and EXT2 | PTPN11 | IDH1 and 2, PTHR1 | IDH1 and 2 |
| Lesions | Osteochondromas (OCs) | Osteochondromas and enchondromas | Enchondromas | Enchondromas + vascular malformations |
| Key History | Lesions plateau in growth at puberty but do not regress. Lesions do not arise in adulthood. OCs form at long bone ends (forearm, femur) and on flat bones (hips, shoulders, blade or ribs) | Lesions resolve with time (by adulthood often) Lesions usually in hands and feet Enchondromas tend to arise from the metaphyses (so can grow into the diaphysis or growth plate), whereas OCs arise next to the growth plate and grow away from it. | Starts in 1st decade of life Enchondromas as described in MC. Tend to be one sided or localise to one area, especially hands over feet. Bones deform more severely than in HME/MC. | Like Olliers but also get venous malformations (VMs, often presenting as soft blue subcutaneous nodules that empty with pressue) and less commonly haemangiomas or lymphangiomas or phleboliths. Starts in1st decade of life, usually between age 4-5 years. |
| Gender | Males more severely affected. | Tends to affects males | Tends to affects females | Equally affects males and females |
| Malignancy risk | 4% [ | < 1% | 25% (5–50%) Skeletal, brain, visceral, ovarian | 30% (25–40%) [ Skeletal and vascular |
| Trials | Phase 2 retinoic acid like treatment | – | – | Rapamycin for spindle cell VM (case report) but failed for haemangiomas (case report) [ |
Summary table of conditions discussed and related treatments
| Disease | Treatments (stage if still in trials) | Additional Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FGFR3 spectrum disorders | Achondroplasia | Statins (in mouse models) GH Vosoritide (CNP analogue, phase 3) TransCon CNP (phase 2 (Q3 2019)) TA-46 (soluble FGFR3 ligand trap, Therachon AG, phase 1) Infagratinib (preclinical studies complete) Meclozine (drug repurposing, phase 1) | -Studies of Statin related therapy show conflicting results. |
| Hypochondroplasia | Somatropin (human growth hormone) | ||
| High Bone Mass | Osteopetrosis | Interferon gamma 1b Human stem cell transplantation siRNA therapy (in vitro cell lines) RANKL replacement (mouse models) | siRNA therapy: For AD Osteopetrosis RNAKL replacement: For RANKL AR Osteopetrosis |
| Low Bone Mass | Osteoporosis Pseudoglioma syndrome | Lithium carbonate (mice studies promising) Anti-sclerostin therapy (mouse model) | Lithium carbonate: -limited data from pilot human studies |
| Osteogenesis Imperfecta | Bisphosphonates, GH Teriparitide RANKL inhibitors (Denosumab, clinical trials) Anti-sclerostin therapy (Setrusumab, BPS804) TGF-β inhibitors (Fresolimumab, phase 1) Stem cell (mesenchymal, inutero transplant) Raloxifene Gene silencing –siRNA, shRNA, ODNs Vibraflex device (BCH), Physical rehab training | GH: -GH in OI in type IV Teriparitide: -TOPAZ trial (Teriparitide and Zolendronate, recruiting) Setrusumab: -phase 2B trial (ASTEROID study) Fresolimumab: -phase 1 trial in US (recruitment) Stem cell: -BOOSTB4 trial (gaining trial approval) Gene silencing: -At invitro and ex vivo stage. Vibraflex: -conflicting evidence for benefit | |
| Low Bone Mineral Density | Hypophosphatasia | Asfotase Alfa (approved) Gene therapies (animal studies) Anti-sclerostin therapy (BPS804, human proof of concept trials) Bone marrow transplant, Teriparatide | Asfotase Alfa: For perinatal, infantile, juvenile HPP |
| -X-Linked Hypophosphataemia | Anti FGFR23 mab; Burosumab (Crysvita) | Approved by NICE Sept 2018 | |
| Metaphyseal Dysplasia | -Metaphyseal Chondrodysplasia Schmid type | Carbamazepine (phase 1–2, Newcastle led) | Recruiting 2019. |
| -Schwartz Jampel Synd. | Carbamazepine (case reports) | ||
| FOP | Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva | REGN 2477 (Anti Activin A, phase 2) Palovarotene (selective retinoid agonist, phase 3) Rapamycin Other small molecule therapies in development. | |
| Genetic Bone Tumours | Hereditary Multiple Exostoses | Palovarotene (phase 2) |