Diagnosis, treatment, and surveillance of Diamond-Blackfan anaemia syndrome: international consensus statement

Archive ouverte

Wlodarski, Marcin | Vlachos, Adrianna | Farrar, Jason | Da Costa, Lydie | Kattamis, Antonis | Dianzani, Irma | Belendez, Cristina | Unal, Sule | Tamary, Hannah | Pasauliene, Ramune | Pospisilova, Dagmar | de la Fuente, Josu | Iskander, Deena | Wolfe, Lawrence | Liu, Johnson | Shimamura, Akiko | Albrecht, Katarzyna | Lausen, Birgitte | Bechensteen, Anne Grete | Tedgard, Ulf | Puzik, Alexander | Quarello, Paola | Ramenghi, Ugo | Bartels, Marije | Hengartner, Heinz | Farah, Roula | Al Saleh, Mahasen | Hamidieh, Amir Ali | Yang, Wan | Ito, Etsuro | Kook, Hoon | Ovsyannikova, Galina | Kager, Leo | Gleizes, Pierre-Emmanuel | Dalle, Jean-Hugues | Strahm, Brigitte | Niemeyer, Charlotte | Lipton, Jeffrey | Leblanc, Thierry

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. Diamond-Blackfan anaemia (DBA), first described over 80 years ago, is a congenital disorder of erythropoiesis with a predilection for birth defects and cancer. Despite scientific advances, this chronic, debilitating, and life-limiting disorder continues to cause a substantial physical, psychological, and financial toll on patients and their families. The highly complex medical needs of affected patients require specialised expertise and multidisciplinary care. However, gaps remain in effectively bridging scientific discoveries to clinical practice and disseminating the latest knowledge and best practices to providers. Following the publication of the first international consensus in 2008, advances in our understanding of the genetics, natural history, and clinical management of DBA have strongly supported the need for new consensus recommendations. In 2014 in Freiburg, Germany, a panel of 53 experts including clinicians, diagnosticians, and researchers from 27 countries convened. With support from patient advocates, the panel met repeatedly over subsequent years, engaging in ongoing discussions. These meetings led to the development of new consensus recommendations in 2024, replacing the previous guidelines. To account for the diverse phenotypes including presentation without anaemia, the panel agreed to adopt the term DBA syndrome. We propose new simplified diagnostic criteria, describe the genetics of DBA syndrome and its phenocopies, and introduce major changes in therapeutic standards. These changes include lowering the prednisone maintenance dose to maximum 0·3 mg/kg per day, raising the pre-transfusion haemoglobin to 9–10 g/dL independent of age, recommending early aggressive chelation, broadening indications for haematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, and recommending systematic clinical surveillance including early colorectal cancer screening. In summary, the current practice guidelines standardise the diagnostics, treatment, and long-term surveillance of patients with DBA syndrome of all ages worldwide.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Molecular approaches to diagnose Diamond-Blackfan anemia: The EuroDBA experience

Archive ouverte | da Costa, Lydie | CCSD

International audience. Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a rare congenital erythroblastopenia and inherited bone marrow failure syndrome that affects approximately seven individuals in every million live births. In ...

Recurring mutations in RPL15 are linked to hydrops fetalis and treatment independence in Diamond-Blackfan anemia

Archive ouverte | Wlodarski, Marcin | CCSD

International audience. Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a rare inherited bone marrow failure disorder linked predominantly to ribosomal protein gene mutations. Here the European DBA consortium reports novel mutatio...

RPS19 mutations in patients with Diamond-Blackfan anemia

Archive ouverte | Campagnoli, Maria Francesca | CCSD

Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is an inherited disease characterized by pure erythroid aplasia. Thirty percent (30%) of patients display malformations, especially of the hands, face, heart, and urogenital tract. DBA has an autosoma...

Chargement des enrichissements...