Revised recommendations for the management of Gaucher disease in children

Kaplan, P; Baris, H; De Meirleir, L; Di Rocco, M; El-Beshlawy, A; Huemer, M; Martins, AM; Nascu, I; Rohrbach, M; Steinbach, L; Cohen, IJ

HERO ID

1534887

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Review

Year

2013

Language

English

PMID

22772880

HERO ID 1534887
Material Type Review
In Press No
Year 2013
Title Revised recommendations for the management of Gaucher disease in children
Authors Kaplan, P; Baris, H; De Meirleir, L; Di Rocco, M; El-Beshlawy, A; Huemer, M; Martins, AM; Nascu, I; Rohrbach, M; Steinbach, L; Cohen, IJ
Journal European Journal of Pediatrics
Volume 172
Issue 4
Page Numbers 447-458
Abstract Gaucher disease is an inherited pan-ethnic disorder that commonly begins in childhood and is caused by deficient activity of the lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase. Two major phenotypes are recognized: non-neuropathic (type 1) and neuropathic (types 2 and 3). Symptomatic children are severely affected and manifest growth retardation, delayed puberty, early-onset osteopenia, significant splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, thrombocytopenia, anemia, severe bone pain, acute bone crises, and fractures. Symptomatic children with types 1 or 3 should receive enzyme replacement therapy, which will prevent debilitating and often irreversible disease progression and allow those with non-neuropathic disease to lead normal healthy lives. Children should be monitored every 6 months (physical exam including growth, spleen and liver volume, neurologic exam, hematologic indices) and have one to two yearly skeletal assessments (bone density and imaging, preferably with magnetic resonance, of lumbar vertebrae and lower limbs), with specialized cardiovascular monitoring for some type 3 patients. Response to treatment will determine the frequency of monitoring and optimal dose of enzyme replacement. Treatment of children with type 2 (most severe) neuropathic Gaucher disease is supportive. Pre-symptomatic children, usually with type 1 Gaucher, increasingly are being detected because of affected siblings and screening in high-prevalence communities. In this group, annual examinations (including bone density) are recommended. However, monitoring of asymptomatic children with affected siblings should be guided by the age and severity of manifestations in the first affected sibling. Treatment is necessary only if signs and symptoms develop. Conclusion: Early detection and treatment of symptomatic types 1 and 3 Gaucher disease with regular monitoring will optimize outcome. Pre-symptomatic children require regular monitoring. Genetic counseling is important.
Doi 10.1007/s00431-012-1771-z
Pmid 22772880
Wosid WOS:000316682700003
Url <Go to ISI>://BCI:BCI201300321225
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English