Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/220496
Title: Prognostic significance of mutation type and chromosome fragility in Fanconi anemia
Author: Ramírez de Haro, María José
Pujol, Roser
Minguillón, Jordi
Bogliolo, Massimo
Persico, Ilaria
Cavero, Debora
Cal, Aurora De La
Río, Paula
Navarro, Susana
Casado, José Antonio
Bailador, Almudena
Sanchez De La Fuente, Antonio
López de Heredia, Miguel
Almazán, Francisco
Antelo, M. Luisa
Argilés, Bienvenida
Badell, Isabel
Baragaño, Marta
Beléndez, Cristina
Bermúdez, Mar
Bernués, Marta
Buedo, María Isabel
Carrasco, Estela
Català, Albert
Costa, Dolors
Cuesta, Isabel
Fernandez Delgado, Rafael
Fernández Teijeiro, Ana
Figuera, Ángela
García, Marta
Gondra, Ainhoa
González, Macarena
González Muñiz, Soledad
Hernández Rodríguez, Ines
Ibañez, Fátima
Kelleher, Nicholas John
Lendínez, Francisco
López Duarte, Mónica
López Almaraz, Ricardo
Marchante, Inmaculada
Mendoza, Carmen
Nieto, José
Ojeda, Emilio
Payán Pernía, Salvador
Peláez, Irene
Pérez De Soto, Inmaculada
Portugal, Raquel
Ramos Arroyo, María A.
Regueiro, Alexandra
Rodríguez, Ana
Rosell, Jordi
Saez, Raquel
Sánchez, José
Sánchez, Martha
Senent, M. Leonor
Tapia, María
Trujillo Quintero, Juan Pablo
Vagace, José Manuel
Verdú Amorós, Jaime
Verdugo, Victória
Vidales, Isabel
Villarreal, Jasson
Díaz de Heredia, Cristina
Sevilla, Julián
Bueren, Juan Antonio
Surrallés i Calonge, Jordi
Keywords: Malalties hereditàries
Pronòstic mèdic
Genetic diseases
Prognosis
Issue Date: 19-Nov-2024
Publisher: Wiley
Abstract: Fanconi anemia (FA) is a rare genetic disease characterized by high phenotypic and genotypic heterogeneity, and extreme chromosome fragility. To better understand the natural history of FA, identify genetic risk and prognostic factors, and develop novel therapeutic strategies, the Spanish Registry of Patients with FA collects data on clinical features, chromosome fragility, genetic subtypes, and DNA sequencing with informed consent of participating individuals. In this article, we describe the clinical evolution of 227 patients followed up for up to 30 years, for whom our data indicate a cumulative cancer incidence of 86% by age 50. We found that patients with lower chromosome fragility had a milder malformation spectrum and better outcomes in terms of later-onset hematologic impairment, less severe bone marrow failure, and lower cancer risk. We also found that outcomes were better for patients with mutations leading to mutant FANCA protein expression (genetic hypomorphism) than for patients lacking this protein. Likewise, prognosis was consistently better for patients with biallelic mutations in FANCD2 (mainly hypomorphic mutations) than for patients with biallelic mutations in FANCA and FANCG, with the lack of the mutant protein in patients with biallelic mutations in FANCG contributing to their poorer outcomes. Our results regarding the clinical impact of chromosome fragility and genetic hypomorphism suggest that mutant FA proteins retain residual activity. This finding should encourage the development of novel therapeutic strategies aimed at partially or fully enhancing mutant FA function, thereby preventing or delaying bone marrow failure and cancer in patients with FA.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.27520
It is part of: American Journal of Hematology, 2024, vol. 100, num. 2, p. 272-284
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/220496
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.27520
ISSN: 1096-8652
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Institut d'lnvestigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL))



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