| Literature DB >> 33398909 |
Lorenzo D Botto1,2, Marie Meeths3,4,5, Belinda Campos-Xavier1, Rosalba Bergamaschi6, Laura Mazzanti6, Emanuela Scarano6, Andrea Finocchi7,8, Caterina Cancrini7,8, Birgit Zirn9, Ingrid Kühnle10, Christof Maria Kramm10, Yasemin Alanay11, Wendy D Jones12, Melita Irving13,14, Ataf Sabir13, Jan-Inge Henter3,5, Birgit Borgström15, Ann Nordgren4, Anna Hammarsjö4, Caterina Putti16, Chiara Mozzato17, Daniela Zuccarello17, Gen Nishimura18, Luisa Bonafè1, Giedre Grigelioniene4, Sheila Unger1, Andrea Superti-Furga1.
Abstract
Bone dysplasias (osteochondrodysplasias) are a large group of conditions associated with short stature, skeletal disproportion, and radiographic abnormalities of skeletal elements. Nearly all are genetic in origin. We report a series of seven children with similar findings of chondrodysplasia and growth failure following early hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for pediatric non-oncologic disease: hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis or HLH (five children, three with biallelic HLH-associated variants [in PRF1 and UNC13D] and one with HLH secondary to visceral Leishmaniasis), one child with severe combined immunodeficiency and one with Omenn syndrome (both children had biallelic RAG1 pathogenic variants). All children had normal growth and no sign of chondrodysplasia at birth and prior to their primary disease. After HSCT, all children developed growth failure, with standard deviation scores for height at or below -3. Radiographically, all children had changes in the spine, metaphyses and epiphyses, compatible with a spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia. Genomic sequencing failed to detect pathogenic variants in genes associated with osteochondrodysplasias. We propose that such chondrodysplasia with growth failure is a novel, rare, but clinically important complication following early HSCT for non-oncologic pediatric diseases. The pathogenesis is unknown but could possibly involve loss or perturbation of the cartilage-bone stem cell population.Entities:
Keywords: chondrodysplasia; hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; phenocopy; skeletal dysplasia; stem cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33398909 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.62021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802