OBJECTIVES: The beneficial effects of macrophage-targeted glucocerebrosidase (Ceredase) in patients with Gaucher disease are well established. A minority of recipients develop transient nonneutralizing antibodies to the exogenous enzyme. A 7-year-old patient with type 3 Gaucher disease whose clinical course began to deteriorate while receiving Ceredase developed a progressively increasing titer of IgG antibody that blocked the catalytic activity of Ceredase. We sought to develop a strategy that would restore the benefit of enzyme replacement therapy in this patient. METHODS: The patient was treated with two courses of a combination of plasma exchange, cyclophosphamide, intravenous IgG, and large doses of Ceredase. RESULTS: After the second course of this regimen, the titer of the neutralizing antibody in the blood gradually declined to negligible levels. Clinical parameters that had been deteriorating (reduction of hemoglobin level, increased serum acid phosphates activity, repeated skeletal infarctions, progressive enlargement and infarction of the spleen) all improved. There has been no recurrence of the neutralizing antibody in this patient. CONCLUSIONS: Very few patients with Gaucher disease who are treated with Ceredase develop a neutralizing antibody to the exogenous enzyme. In the rare instances where this phenomenon occurs, it is likely that the strategy we have used (plasma exchange, cyclophosphamide, intravenous IgG, and large doses of enzyme) may provide benefit to such individuals. It is also likely that this technique may be helpful when enzyme replacement therapy is attempted in patients with other disorders in which the genetic mutation abrogates the production of the protein (CRIM-negative individuals).
OBJECTIVES: The beneficial effects of macrophage-targeted glucocerebrosidase (Ceredase) in patients with Gaucher disease are well established. A minority of recipients develop transient nonneutralizing antibodies to the exogenous enzyme. A 7-year-old patient with type 3 Gaucher disease whose clinical course began to deteriorate while receiving Ceredase developed a progressively increasing titer of IgG antibody that blocked the catalytic activity of Ceredase. We sought to develop a strategy that would restore the benefit of enzyme replacement therapy in this patient. METHODS: The patient was treated with two courses of a combination of plasma exchange, cyclophosphamide, intravenous IgG, and large doses of Ceredase. RESULTS: After the second course of this regimen, the titer of the neutralizing antibody in the blood gradually declined to negligible levels. Clinical parameters that had been deteriorating (reduction of hemoglobin level, increased serum acid phosphates activity, repeated skeletal infarctions, progressive enlargement and infarction of the spleen) all improved. There has been no recurrence of the neutralizing antibody in this patient. CONCLUSIONS: Very few patients with Gaucher disease who are treated with Ceredase develop a neutralizing antibody to the exogenous enzyme. In the rare instances where this phenomenon occurs, it is likely that the strategy we have used (plasma exchange, cyclophosphamide, intravenous IgG, and large doses of enzyme) may provide benefit to such individuals. It is also likely that this technique may be helpful when enzyme replacement therapy is attempted in patients with other disorders in which the genetic mutation abrogates the production of the protein (CRIM-negative individuals).
Authors: Muhammad Ameer Saif; Brian W Bigger; Karen E Brookes; Jean Mercer; Karen L Tylee; Heather J Church; Denise K Bonney; Simon Jones; J Ed Wraith; Robert F Wynn Journal: Haematologica Date: 2012-02-27 Impact factor: 9.941
Authors: Ari Zimran; Gregory M Pastores; Anna Tylki-Szymanska; Derralynn A Hughes; Deborah Elstein; Rebecca Mardach; Christine Eng; Laurie Smith; Margaret Heisel-Kurth; Joel Charrow; Paul Harmatz; Paul Fernhoff; William Rhead; Nicola Longo; Pilar Giraldo; Juan A Ruiz; David Zahrieh; Eric Crombez; Gregory A Grabowski Journal: Am J Hematol Date: 2013-01-22 Impact factor: 10.047
Authors: Malte Lenders; Leon Paul Neußer; Michael Rudnicki; Peter Nordbeck; Sima Canaan-Kühl; Albina Nowak; Markus Cybulla; Boris Schmitz; Jan Lukas; Christoph Wanner; Stefan-Martin Brand; Eva Brand Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol Date: 2018-11-01 Impact factor: 10.121