| Literature DB >> 36079173 |
Adrian Viteri-Noël1,2, Andrés González-García1,2, José Luis Patier1,2, Martin Fabregate1, Nuria Bara-Ledesma1, Mónica López-Rodríguez1,2, Vicente Gómez Del Olmo1, Luis Manzano1,2.
Abstract
Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia is an inherited disease related to an alteration in angiogenesis, manifesting as cutaneous telangiectasias and epistaxis. As complications, it presents vascular malformations in organs such as the lung, liver, digestive tract, and brain. Currently, diagnosis can be made using the Curaçao criteria or by identifying the affected gene. In recent years, there has been an advance in the understanding of the pathophysiology of the disease, which has allowed the use of new therapeutic strategies to improve the quality of life of patients. This article reviews some of the main and most current evidence on the pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, diagnostic approach, screening for complications, and therapeutic options, both pharmacological and surgical.Entities:
Keywords: VEGF; angiogenesis; arteriovenous malformations; epistaxis; hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasias; telangiectasias
Year: 2022 PMID: 36079173 PMCID: PMC9457069 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11175245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Genes responsible for HHT [6,7].
| Gen | Affected Protein | Location | Phenotype | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Endoglin | 9q34.11 | HHT1 | 39–59% |
|
| ALK1 | 12q13.13 | HHT2 | 25–57% |
|
| Smad4 | 18q21.1 | HHT-juvenile polyposis syndrome | 1–2% |
|
| BMP9 | 10q11.22 | HHT-like | <1% |
|
| p120-RasGAP | 5q14.3 | RASA-1 related disorders (CM-AVM) | Unknown |
HHT, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia; GDF, growth differentiation factor; p120-RasGAP, P120-Ras GTPase activating protein; CM–AVM, capillary malformation–arteriovenous malformation syndrome.
Figure 1Main pathways involved in the pathophysiology of HHT. Members of the TGF-β family (mainly BMP9 and 10), bind to specific cell surface type I (R-I) and type II (R-II) receptors. These receptors exhibit serine/threonine kinase activity. The main R-I receptors involved in this pathway are ALK-1 and ALK-5. On the other hand, R-II receptors include TβRII, ActRII, BMPRII. Endoglin is an auxiliary receptor that associates with the ligand, ALK-1/R-II complex, potentiating its action. A soluble form of endoglin (sol-eng) can be generated by proteolysis of the membrane-bound receptor that can sequester ligands (BMP9 or 10) and thus modulate their binding to R-I/R-II receptors. The association between R-I (either ALK-1 or ALK-5) with R-II determines the specificity of ligand signaling. Upon ligand binding, R-II transphosphorylates R-I, which then propagates the signal by phosphorylating the receptor-regulated Smad family of proteins. Once phosphorylated, R-Smads form heteromeric complexes with a cooperating homologue called Co-Smad (Smad4) and translocate to the nucleus where they regulate the transcriptional activity of target genes. In endothelial cells, ALK1 and ALK5 activate signaling two different pathways via Smad1, 5, 8 (ALK1) or Smad2, 3 (ALK5), respectively. The first one promotes transcription of genes related to angiogenesis. The second promotes transcription of genes related to repairing phase. Endoglin, ALK1, Smad4, and BMP9 proteins are encoded by ENG, ACVRL1, MADH4, and GDF2 genes respectively. ActR, activin receptor; BMP, bone morphogenetic protein; BMPR, BMP receptor [14,15,16].
Summary of clinical manifestations and their repercussions in patients with HHT [34,36].
| Clinical | Prevalence (%) | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Epistaxis | 90–95 | Most limiting symptom for patients. |
| Telangiectasias | 95 | It can produce recurrent bleeding in the bearing areas of the body or those in contact with external surfaces such as the fingertips. |
| Anemia | 50 | It is associated with asthenia and chronic fatigue. |
| Pulmonary AVMs | 15–50 | Chronic hypoxaemia is only present in case of large pulmonary AVMs. Prevalence 10–20% in HT-II, 60% in HHT-I. |
| Hepatic AVMs | 47–74 | Three different types. Depending on their predominance, they increase the risk of HOHF, portal hypertension, hepatic encephalopathy, biliary ischemia, mesenteric ischemia, and hepatic cirrhosis. |
| Cerebral AVMs | 2–20 | Nonspecific symptoms (headaches or seizures) |
| Digestive AVMs | 13–30 | AVMs predominate in the stomach and duodenum. |
| Pulmonary hypertension | 1–5 | Can be caused by different mechanisms including hereditary group 1 PAH, or due to high cardiac output in the setting of liver AVMs (mostly associated with ACVRL1 mutation). |
AVMs, arteriovenous malformation; HOHF, high output heart failure; PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension.
Figure 2Pulmonary AVMs. AngioCT reconstruction of the thorax of a patient with HHT from the systemic and minority disease unit of the Hospital Ramón y Cajal, with the patient’s consent. Note the AVM located in the left lower lobe (red arrows).
Therapeutic approach to HHT according to the different clinical manifestations that may occur [34,37].
| Manifestations | Treatment | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Epistaxis | Moisturizing | Recent evidence shows no superiority on all topical therapy (tranexamic acid, estrogens, propranolol, and bevacizumab) compared to placebo. |
| Ablative treatments (laser, radiofrequency ablation, electrosurgery and sclerotherapy). | Consider if epistaxis persists despite topical treatments. | |
| Septodermoplasty | Consider in patients who do not respond to previous treatments. | |
| Digestive | Endoscopic procedures are diagnostic and therapeutic. | Repeat sessions are discouraged to avoid repeated iatrogenic injury to the intestinal mucosa. |
| In mild cases, oral antifibrinolytics may be considered. | ||
| If, despite previous treatments, bleeding persists, anemia requiring transfusions, antiangiogenic drugs (bevacizumab) can be initiated. | ||
| Anemia | Oral ironIV iron if intolerant or lack of response to oral iron. | A usual dose of 35 mg elemental iron tablets daily indicated. |
| Pulmonary AVMs | Transcatheter embolization: | |
| Chest CT is recommended to identify possible recanalization. | Follow-up with CT scan after embolization every 6 months, then every 3–5 years. | |
| Cerebral | If TTCE identifies the presence of a short circuit (although pulmonary AVM is not identified in CT): | |
| Pulmonary | Extend study to identify primary cause and address management (multidisciplinary consultation). | |
| Hepatic VMs | Most patients with symptomatic hepatic AVMs can be managed with medical treatment. | |
| Refer to referral center to consider liver transplantation in patients with refractory symptomatic hepatic AVMs (HOHF, biliary ischemia, or complicated portal hypertension). | Liver biopsies should be avoided in patients with HHT. | |
| Cerebral AVMs | Treated depending on risk of bleeding and expertise of the neurosurgical team. Embolization or stereotactic radiosurgery depending on the size, location, and symptomatology. |
AVMs, arteriovenous malformation; VM, vascular malformation; HOHF, high output heart failure; TTCE, transthoracic contrast echocardiography; CT, contrast tomography.