Da Costa Lydie, O'Donohue Marie-Françoise, van Dooijeweert Birgit, Albrecht Katarzyna, Unal Sule, Ramenghi Ugo, Leblanc Thierry, Dianzani Irma, Tamary Hannah, Bartels Marije, Gleizes Pierre-Emmanuel, Wlodarski Marcin, MacInnes Alyson W
University Paris VII Denis DIDEROT, Faculté de Médecine Xavier Bichat, F-75019 Paris, France; Laboratory of Excellence for Red Cell, LABEX GR-Ex, F-75015 Paris, France; Inserm Unit 1134, INTS, F-75015 Paris, France; Service d'onco-hématologie pédiatrique, Robert Debré Hospital, F-75019 Paris, France.
Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire Eucaryote, Centre de Biologie Intégrative, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, UPS, 31000 Toulouse, France.
Eur J Med Genet. 2018 Nov;61(11):664-673. doi: 10.1016/j.ejmg.2017.10.017. Epub 2017 Oct 26.
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 addition to anemia, about 50% of all DBA patients suffer from various physical malformations of the face, hands, heart, or urogenital region. The disorder is almost exclusively driven by haploinsufficient mutations in one of several ribosomal protein (RP) genes, although for ∼30% of diagnosed patients no mutation is found in any of the known DBA-linked genes. Because DBA is such a rare disease with a particularly wide range of clinical phenotypes and molecular signatures, the development of collaborative efforts such as the ERARE-funded European DBA consortium (EuroDBA) has become imperative for DBA research. EuroDBA was founded in 2012 and brings together dedicated clinical and biological researchers of DBA from France, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, Israel, Poland, and Turkey to achieve a number of goals including the consolidation of data in patient registries, establishment of minimal diagnostic criteria, and projects aimed at more fully describing the different mutations linked to DBA. This review will cover the history of the EuroDBA registries, the methods used by EuroDBA in the diagnosis of DBA, and how the consortium has successfully worked together towards the discovery of new DBA-linked genes and the better understanding their pathophysiological effects.
先天性纯红细胞再生障碍性贫血(DBA)是一种罕见的先天性成红细胞减少症和遗传性骨髓衰竭综合征,每百万例活产中约有7人受其影响。除贫血外,约50%的DBA患者还患有面部、手部、心脏或泌尿生殖系统的各种身体畸形。该疾病几乎完全由几种核糖体蛋白(RP)基因之一的单倍体不足突变引起,尽管在约30%的确诊患者中,在任何已知的与DBA相关的基因中均未发现突变。由于DBA是一种如此罕见的疾病,具有特别广泛的临床表型和分子特征,因此开展合作研究,如由欧洲罕见病研究协会(ERARE)资助的欧洲DBA联盟(EuroDBA),对于DBA研究来说已势在必行。EuroDBA成立于2012年,汇集了来自法国、意大利、荷兰、德国、以色列、波兰和土耳其的专注于DBA研究的临床和生物学研究人员以实现多个目标,包括整合患者登记数据、建立最低诊断标准以及旨在更全面描述与DBA相关的不同突变的项目。本综述将涵盖EuroDBA登记处的历史、EuroDBA用于诊断DBA的方法,以及该联盟如何成功合作以发现新的与DBA相关的基因并更好地理解其病理生理效应。