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Clinical and radiological improvement in Gorham-Stout disease after sirolimus treatment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Gorham-Stout disease (GSD) is a rare syndrome that leads to lymphatic malformations causing bone breakdown, primarily affecting bone structures through certain growth factor pathways, which can be targeted with mTOR inhibitors like sirolimus and everolimus.
  • - A case study of a one-year-old girl with severe GSD involved a right femur fracture, progressive limb swelling, and complications that resulted in disarticulating the limb; traditional treatments failed, but sirolimus was started after six months.
  • - Sirolimus treatment showed significant improvements in the patient's condition by inhibiting bone breakdown and promoting bone formation, highlighting its potential as an effective therapy for GSD.

Article Abstract

Background: Gorham-Stout disease (GSD) is a rare syndrome characterized by lymphatic malformations, mainly in bone structures, causing progressive osteolysis. Lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation depends on several growth factors that use the phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathway and converge on the mammalian target molecule of the rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. These findings have allowed treating GSD with mTOR pathway inhibitors such as sirolimus or everolimus.

Case Report: We present the case of a one-year-old female patient referred to our institution after a right femur fracture and progressive limb volume increase, disproportionately to the trauma. After several episodes of soft tissue infections, imaging studies showed pseudarthrosis, lytic lesions, and progressive loss of the right femur that ended in total absence. A femur biopsy showed lymphatic structures positive with D2-40 staining, diagnosing GSD. After six months of non-response to traditional treatments, the limb was disarticulated at the hip level, and oral sirolimus treatment was initiated, showing clinical and radiological improvement with minor lytic lesions and evidence of ossification after 20 months of treatment.

Conclusions: Oral sirolimus treatment for GSD inhibits angiogenesis and osteoclastic activity, stimulating bone anabolism and leading to arrested osteolysis progression and improved ossification, quality of life, and patient prognosis. Therefore, sirolimus should be considered a therapeutic option for this rare disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.24875/BMHIM.23000015DOI Listing

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