Microvillous inclusion disease: how to improve the prognosis of a severe congenital enterocyte disorder

U Halac, F Lacaille, F Joly, JP Hugot… - Journal of pediatric …, 2011 - journals.lww.com
U Halac, F Lacaille, F Joly, JP Hugot, C Talbotec, V Colomb, FM Ruemmele, O Goulet
Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition, 2011journals.lww.com
Results: Almost half of the children were from consanguineous families from the
Mediterranean area. All of the patients completely depended on PN. Four children died of
PN complications before 4 years of age. Before or without SBTx, growth failure was common
(mean height− 2.5 standard deviations [SD]), as was developmental delay (12/24), liver
(20/22 with fibrosis) or kidney disease (3/23 with moderate renal insufficiency), and
osteoporosis (6/24). Thirteen children underwent SBTx (9 isolated, 4 combined with liver Tx) …
Results:
Almost half of the children were from consanguineous families from the Mediterranean area. All of the patients completely depended on PN. Four children died of PN complications before 4 years of age. Before or without SBTx, growth failure was common (mean height− 2.5 standard deviations [SD]), as was developmental delay (12/24), liver (20/22 with fibrosis) or kidney disease (3/23 with moderate renal insufficiency), and osteoporosis (6/24). Thirteen children underwent SBTx (9 isolated, 4 combined with liver Tx) at a median age of 3.5 years. Follow-up after SBTx was 0.4 to 14 years. Patient survival rates were 63% without SBTx and 77% with SBTx. After SBTx, 4 children experienced catch-up growth.
Conclusions:
PN in MVID is difficult to manage and requires expertise. Despite improved results in expert centers, the risk of death or irreversible sequelae is higher with PN than after Tx. SBTx, despite being complicated, remains the only hope to improve the quality of life and long-term prognosis of these children.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins