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Griscelli Syndrome Type 2: Comprehensive Analysis of 149 New and Previously Described Patients with RAB27A Deficiency.

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Abstract

Griscelli syndrome type 2 (GS2) is a rare, life-threatening immunodysregulatory disorder characterised by impaired cytotoxic activity leading to susceptibility to haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) and hypopigmentation. We completed a literature review and analysis of clinical data of 149 patients with GS2 including 8 new patients.We identified three founder mutations which show diverse phenotypic profiles (RAB27A c.244 C > T, p.R82C, c.514_518delCAAGC, p.Q172NfsX2, c.550 C > T, p.R184X). The most common presentation was HLH (119/149, 80%), with high proportion of central nervous system involvement (68/149, 46%). Features of partial albinism were present in 105 of 149 cases (70%). Hypopigmentation can be absent in GS2 and should not exclude the diagnosis. Patients with biallelic protein truncating variants (PTV) were more likely to have systemic HLH (44/56, 79%) and partial albinism (45/56, 80%), in comparison to hypomorphic variants (9/41, 22%; 20/41, 49%). Patients with hypomorphic variants presented later (5.4 years cf. 0.4 years, p = < 0.0001) and were more likely to have isolated CNS HLH (2% cf. 42%, p = 0.001).Mortality was high in the cohort (50/149, 34%). Survival of cases post-HLH who underwent transplantation is superior to un-transplanted patients, suggesting adequate HLH control followed by early HSCT is highly beneficial. Mortality was reduced in HSCT recipients versus the un-transplanted group where follow-up data was available (14% compared to 58%).Asymptomatic cases identified through family history/genetic screening may benefit from pre-emptive HSCT, but access and development of robust functional testing are required. High mortality related to HLH remains concerning and emphasises the need for improved molecular characterisation and clinical prognostic factors to guide management decisions.

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Acknowledgements: We would like to acknowledge the patients and their families in this study who consented to data analysis. We also acknowledge the authors of the collated cases in the UK and internationally, and by extension, the patients and families in our study cohort. We would also like to acknowledge the staff of Great Ormond Street and King’s College London hospitals who cared for the patients.


Funder: This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research Integrated Academic Training scheme (JM).

Journal Title

J Clin Immunol

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Journal ISSN

0271-9142
1573-2592

Volume Title

45

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/