1. Clinical, genetic characteristics and treatment outcomes of children and adolescents with osteogenesis imperfecta: a two-center experience.
- Author
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Erbaş İM, İlgün Gürel D, Manav Kabayeğit Z, Koç A, Ünüvar T, Abacı A, Böber E, and Anık A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Collagen Type I genetics, Female, Humans, Male, Mutation genetics, Pamidronate therapeutic use, Phenotype, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Connective Tissue Diseases, Fractures, Bone genetics, Osteogenesis Imperfecta diagnosis, Osteogenesis Imperfecta drug therapy, Osteogenesis Imperfecta genetics
- Abstract
Background: Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), is a heritable, heterogeneous connective tissue disorder, characterized by fragile bones. There are conflicting results about genotype-phenotype correlations and efficiency of bisphosphonate treatment in this disorder., Aim: We aimed to evaluate the clinical, genetic characteristics, and long-term follow-up results of children and adolescents with OI., Materials and Methods: A two-center retrospective study was conducted using demographic, clinical, and genetic data obtained from the medical records of the patients., Results: Twenty-nine patients (62% male, median age; 3.6 years) with OI diagnosis from 26 families were included in the study. Thirteen different variants (nine were novel) were described in 16 patients in COL1A1, COL1A2 , and P3H1 genes. Our siblings with homozygous P3H1 variants had a severe phenotype with intrauterine and neonatal fractures. Twenty-two patients were treated with bisphosphonates (17 of them with pamidronate, five with alendronate) with a median duration of 3.0 (1.6-4.8) years. Eleven patients (50%) suffered from fractures after the treatment. Haploinsufficiency variants in COL1A1 caused a milder skeletal phenotype with less fracture count and better treatment outcomes than structural variants. When compared with the anthropometric measurements at the initial diagnosis time, height Z-scores were lower on the last clinical follow-up (p = 0.009)., Conclusions: We could not find an obvious genotype-phenotype correlation in Turkish OI patients with COL1A1 or COL1A2 variants. Treatment with pamidronate was effective in reducing fracture counts, without any long-term adverse effects.
- Published
- 2022
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