Generalized Arterial Calcification Of Infancy
Summary
Clinical characteristics.
Generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI) is characterized by infantile onset of widespread arterial calcification and/or narrowing of large and medium-sized vessels resulting in cardiovascular findings (which can include heart failure, respiratory distress, edema, cyanosis, hypertension, and/or cardiomegaly). Additional findings can include typical skin and retinal manifestations of pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), periarticular calcifications, development of rickets after infancy, cervical spine fusion, and hearing loss. While mortality in infancy is high, survival into the third and fourth decades has occurred.
Diagnosis/testing.
The diagnosis of GACI is established in a proband with cardiovascular symptoms during infancy associated with widespread arterial calcification on imaging (once secondary causes have been ruled out) and biallelic pathogenic variants in ENPP1 or ABCC6 identified on molecular genetic testing.
Management.
Treatment of manifestations: It remains unclear whether bisphosphonates (most commonly used is etidronate) increase survival. Standard anti-hypertensive therapy is warranted for hypertension. Aspirin therapy is warranted in those with severe coronary stenosis. Intravitreal VEDF inhibitors for choroidal neovascularization, calcitriol and oral phosphate supplement for hypophosphatemic rickets, and hearing aids (as indicated) are all used in the management of this disorder.
Surveillance: No specific guidelines address the issue of surveillance. The appropriate intervals for monitoring depend on the clinical findings. Low-dose CT scan every 3-4 months is used for the first year of life to monitor arterial calcification; echocardiography and troponin are used at regular intervals to monitor cardiovascular issues. Annual (or more frequent) retinal exam for PXE retinal findings and regular lab testing to assure mineral homeostasis associated with the development of rickets. Due to risk for nephrocalcinosis with treatment for rickets, urine calcium is monitored to maintain calciuria below 4 mg/kg/d and yearly renal ultrasound is performed. Evaluate for cervical spine fusion prior to elective endotracheal intubation by a lateral cervical spine x-ray.
Agents/circumstances to avoid: Although no clinical studies have been conducted, it seems prudent to avoid the use of warfarin if possible. Similarly, the use of burosumab, an anti-FGF23 monoclonal antibody, remains controversial due to theoretic concerns.
Evaluation of relatives at risk: It is appropriate to evaluate the younger sibs of a proband with GACI in order to identify as early as possible those who would benefit from treatment.
Genetic counseling.
GACI is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. If both parents are known to be heterozygous for a GACI-causing pathogenic variant, each sib of an affected individual has at conception a 25% chance of being affected, a 50% chance of being heterozygous, and a 25% chance of inheriting neither pathogenic variant. Carrier testing for at-risk relatives, prenatal diagnosis for a pregnancy at increased risk, and preimplantation genetic testing are possible if the pathogenic variants in the family are known.
Diagnosis
No consensus clinical diagnostic criteria for generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI) have been published.
Suggestive Findings
GACI should be suspected in individuals with a combination of the following.
Clinical findings
- Typical cardiovascular findings including heart failure, respiratory distress, edema, cyanosis, hypertension, and/or cardiomegaly
- Characteristic imaging findings of widespread arterial calcification and/or narrowing of large and medium-sized vessels
- Appearance of typical clinical and histologic skin findings of pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) and/or angioid streaks on fundoscopy
- Development of hypophosphatemic rickets after infancy
Imaging
- Computed tomography (CT) is the preferred imaging modality to assess for calcifications. Multi-detector computed tomography has been reported to detect not only arterial wall calcification but also intimal thickening causing luminal narrowing [Greenberg & Gibson 2005], which appears as a target or bull’s eye with a center of high attenuation (the lumen) surrounded by low attenuation (the thickened intima), which is again surrounded by high attenuation (the calcification of the arterial wall).
- Echocardiogram can:
- Detect echobrightness of the arteries near the heart, including the coronary and pulmonary arteries, ascending aorta and aortic arch, and large arteries originating from the aortic arch;
- Detect the presence of left ventricular hypertrophy and/or pericardial effusion.
- Ultrasound examination of the abdomen and head can be used to detect echo-bright vessels.
- Plain radiographs can sometimes detect arterial calcifications, but with low sensitivity, and many times arterial calcifications are detected only on reexamination of radiographs after the diagnosis of GACI has been made post mortem [Glatz et al 2006].
- Magnetic resonance imaging and angiography are insensitive to detecting arterial wall calcification, but can detect luminal stenosis [Pao et al 1998], especially when performed with breath-hold and cardiac gating techniques [Tran & Boechat 2006].
- Coronary angiography can be normal despite the presence of extensive arterial wall calcifications, likely because widespread involvement of all coronary arteries results in diffuse narrowing without the focal areas of stenosis detectable by angiography [Hault et al 2008].
Family history is consistent with autosomal recessive inheritance (e.g., affected sibs and/or parental consanguinity). Absence of a known family history does not preclude the diagnosis.
Establishing the Diagnosis
The diagnosis of GACI is established in a proband with cardiovascular symptoms during infancy associated with widespread arterial calcification on imaging once secondary causes have been ruled out (see Differential Diagnosis), and either biallelic pathogenic variants in ENPP1 or ABCC6 on molecular genetic testing (see Table 1) or, if testing is not diagnostic, histologic findings on arterial biopsy [Morton 1978].
Molecular genetic testing approaches can include a combination of gene-targeted testing (multigene panel) and comprehensive genomic testing (exome sequencing, exome array, genome sequencing), depending on the phenotype.
Gene-targeted testing requires that the clinician determine which gene(s) are likely involved, whereas genomic testing does not. Individuals with the distinctive findings described in Suggestive Findings are likely to be diagnosed using gene-targeted testing (see Option 1), whereas those in whom the diagnosis of GACI has not been considered are more likely to be diagnosed using genomic testing (see Option 2).
Option 1
A multigene panel that includes some or all of the genes listed in Table 1 and other genes of interest (see Differential Diagnosis) is likely to identify the genetic cause of the condition at the most reasonable cost while limiting identification of variants of uncertain significance and pathogenic variants in genes that do not explain the underlying phenotype. Note: (1) The genes included in the panel and the diagnostic sensitivity of the testing used for each gene vary by laboratory and are likely to change over time. (2) Some multigene panels may include genes not associated with the condition discussed in this GeneReview. (3) In some laboratories, panel options may include a custom laboratory-designed panel and/or custom phenotype-focused exome analysis that includes genes specified by the clinician. (4) Methods used in a panel may include sequence analysis, deletion/duplication analysis, and/or other non-sequencing-based tests.
For an introduction to multigene panels click here. More detailed information for clinicians ordering genetic tests can be found here.
Option 2
Comprehensive genomic testing does not require the clinician to determine which gene(s) are likely involved. Exome sequencing is most commonly used; genome sequencing is also possible.
For an introduction to comprehensive genomic testing click here. More detailed information for clinicians ordering genomic testing can be found here.
Table 1.
Gene 1, 2 | Proportion of GACI Attributed to Pathogenic Variants in Gene 3, 4 | Proportion of Pathogenic Variants 5 Detectable by Method | |
---|---|---|---|
Sequence analysis 6 | Gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis 7 | ||
ABCC6 | ~9% | 88% 8 | 12% 8 |
ENPP1 | ~67% | 96% 8 | 4% 8 |
Unknown 9 | ~24% | NA |
- 1.
Genes are listed in alphabetic order.
- 2.
See Table A. Genes and Databases for chromosome locus and protein.
- 3.
Nitschke et al [2012]
- 4.
While a majority of cases of GACI are caused by biallelic pathogenic variants in ENPP1, pathogenic variants in ABCC6 can cause a clinically indistinguishable phenotype.
- 5.
See Molecular Genetics for information on variants detected in these genes.
- 6.
Sequence analysis detects variants that are benign, likely benign, of uncertain significance, likely pathogenic, or pathogenic. Variants may include small intragenic deletions/insertions and missense, nonsense, and splice site variants; typically, exon or whole-gene deletions/duplications are not detected. For issues to consider in interpretation of sequence analysis results, click here.
- 7.
Gene-targeted deletion/duplication analysis detects intragenic deletions or duplications. Methods used may include quantitative PCR, long-range PCR, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), and a gene-targeted microarray designed to detect single-exon deletions or duplications.
- 8.
Data derived from the subscription-based professional view of Human Gene Mutation Database [Stenson et al 2017] and personal unpublished data
- 9.
22 of 92 individuals with GACI reported by Nitschke et al [2012] did not have biallelic pathogenic variants in either ENPP1 or ABCC6; however, two were heterozygous for an ENPP1 pathogenic variant, and six individuals in five unrelated families were heterozygous for an ABCC6 pathogenic variant.
Clinical Characteristics
Clinical Description
Generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI) can result either from ENPP1 deficiency (ENPP1-GACI), or from ABCC6 deficiency (ABCC6-GACI) associated with biallelic pathogenic variants in ENPP1 or ABCC6 respectively. To date, around 250 individuals have been identified with GACI [Authors, personal observation]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these individuals.
Table 2.
Feature | % of Persons with Feature | Comment |
---|---|---|
Arterial calcification | 88%-95% | Most common sites: aorta, pulmonary, coronary, renal |
Extravascular calcification | 50%-60% | Most common site: hip; sternoclavicular joint commonly involved |
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum findings | ~20% | Onset of skin findings in childhood; onset of retinal findings more commonly in adulthood |
Hypophosphatemic rickets / osteomalacia | >90% (ENPP1-GACI only) | Mediated by FGF23 |
Nephrocalcinosis | 50% (ENPP1-GACI mainly) | More commonly a complication of rickets/osteomalacia treatment |
Cervical spine fusion | ~25% (ENPP1-GACI only) | Affects posterior elements |
Hearing loss | 50%-75% (ENPP1-GACI only) | Variable age of onset |
Presentation
A review of published information on 161 individuals with GACI [Chong & Hutchins 2008] identified the following:
- A bimodal age of presentation. 48% had early onset (i.e., in utero or within the first week of life) and 52% had late onset (median age three months).
- In early-onset GACI, the most common initial findings were fetal distress (46%), heart failure (44%), polyhydramnios (38%), hypertension (33%), respiratory distress (30%), hydrops fetalis (28%), edema (24%), "visceral" effusions (20%), cyanosis (22%), cardiomegaly (17%), and ascites (13%).
- In late-onset GACI, the most common presenting findings were respiratory distress (66%), cyanosis (43%), refusal to feed (34%), heart failure (29%), vomiting (24%), irritability (21%), failure to thrive (17%), fever (16%), hypertension (12%), and edema (7%).
- No gender predilection. 43% of those with early-onset GACI and 48% of late-onset GACI were female.
For individuals with fetal involvement, arterial calcifications are commonly detected at the time of prenatal ultrasound (most commonly in the third trimester, but imaging diagnosis in the second trimester is also possible). For infants with postnatal late-onset GACI, the presenting findings (respiratory distress, cyanosis, refusal to feed, heart failure) lead to imaging studies such as echocardiography and/or CT, and the detection of arterial calcification suggests the diagnosis.
Arterial Calcification
Autopsy studies (reviewed by Chong & Hutchins [2008]) noted that the most commonly calcified arteries in early-onset GACI were hepatic (81%), aorta (80%), pulmonary (67%), coronary (53%), and renal (39%). The most commonly calcified arteries in late-onset GACI were coronary (88%), renal (55%), pulmonary (49%), aorta (36%), adrenal (34%), splenic (31%), pancreatic (28%), and mesenteric (26%).
In a cohort of long-term survivors of GACI, the most common sites of arterial calcification were the aorta (14/16), and renal (11/16), mesenteric (11/16), coronary (10/16), iliac (10/16), and pulmonary (10/16) arteries [Ferreira et al 2020].
Although generally spared, the cerebral arteries have been involved in several reported individuals [Glatz et al 2006, van der Sluis et al 2006]; presenting manifestations can thus include seizures [Galletti et al 2011], strokes [Van Dyck et al 1989], or recurrent transient ischemic attacks due to cerebrovascular insufficiency [Thomas et al 1990]. Cystic encephalomalacia is rarely reported [Galletti et al 2011, Nitschke et al 2012].
Peripheral arterial calcifications can present with decreased peripheral pulses; in exceptional cases, gangrene has occurred in the distal extremities [Witzleben 1970, Lussier-Lazaroff & Fletcher 1973], likely caused by a combination of vessel luminal narrowing and left ventricular systolic dysfunction.
Pulmonary hypertension refractory to medical therapy is possible [Farquhar et al 2005, Shaireen et al 2013].
Spontaneous resolution of calcification has been reported in several individuals [Sholler et al 1984, Ciana et al 2006]. In those without continued evidence of calcification, arterial stenoses associated with intimal thickening have been observed [Marrott et al 1984, Thiaville et al 1994, Nitschke et al 2012]. Generalized arterial stenoses without prior evidence of arterial calcification are also possible [Nitschke et al 2012, Ferreira et al 2020].
Arterial calcifications or intimal proliferation may also explain the high frequency of recurrent pregnancy loss (≥4 miscarriages per family in 25% vs in 1%-2% in the general population) and hematochezia (15% vs 2% in the general population) [Ferreira et al 2020].
Extravascular Calcifications
Periarticular calcifications have been noted in eight of 16 surviving individuals with GACI [Ferreira et al 2020]. The most common site of involvement is the hip; other commonly affected joints include the wrist, shoulder, elbow, knee, and sternoclavicular joint [Chong & Hutchins 2008, Ferreira et al 2020].
Other sites of extravascular calcification include the ear lobes [Vera et al 1990, Nitschke et al 2012, Brachet et al 2014], myocardium, and brain parenchyma [Ferreira et al 2020].
Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum (PXE) Findings
Individuals with GACI can manifest PXE-like changes; these were seen in four of 20 survivors, with onset between ages two and 43 years [Ferreira et al 2020]. Skin findings typically manifest during childhood, while retinal findings (peau d’orange, angioid streaks, choroidal neovascularization with subsequent retinal hemorrhage) commonly do not appear until adulthood. However, typical retinal findings of PXE were reported in a girl age four years with ENPP1 deficiency [Freychet et al 2014], indicating that earlier onset of ocular complications is possible.
It has been speculated that children with GACI and findings of PXE were not reported until recently because most died before they developed typical signs of PXE, and many features of PXE (e.g., angioid streaks and skin lesions) are frequently overlooked in the clinical examination of individuals with GACI [Nitschke & Rutsch 2012]. See Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum.
Hypophosphatemic Rickets / Osteomalacia
Individuals with GACI caused by pathogenic variants in ENPP1 who survive the first six months of life (i.e., the critical period) can develop bone deformities, hypophosphatemia, hyperphosphaturia, and elevated alkaline phosphatase, with all the clinical manifestations of autosomal recessive hypophosphatemic rickets type 2 (ARHR2; see Genetically Related Disorders). Conversely, several individuals with ARHR2 have had asymptomatic undiagnosed vascular involvement. Thus, ARHR2 and GACI represent a phenotypic spectrum.
The average age for the development of hypophosphatemia was 1.6 years [Ferreira et al 2020]. In a cohort of surviving individuals with ENPP1 deficiency (mean age 11.7 years), 11 of 16 (69%) had already developed rickets, with a Kaplan-Meier estimate that almost all individuals would develop rickets/osteomalacia by age 14 years [Ferreira et al 2020]. This form of rickets/osteomalacia is mediated by FGF23, and can lead to painful calcification of the entheses (insertion sites of ligaments and tendons) in adulthood [Ferreira et al 2020, Kotwal et al 2020].
There are no reports of hypophosphatemia in individuals with GACI caused by pathogenic variants of ABCC6, although one individual in the series of Nitschke et al [2012] had GACI with hypophosphatemic rickets and was heterozygous for an ABCC6 pathogenic variant.
Nephrocalcinosis
Bilateral medullary nephrocalcinosis was seen in five of ten individuals with ENPP1 deficiency who received standard treatment for hypophosphatemic rickets/osteomalacia, while it was not detected in any of seven individuals who were naïve to treatment. Cortical nephrocalcinosis can be seen in the absence of treatment. While medullary nephrocalcinosis is likely a complication from treatment of rickets/osteomalacia (and thus seen only in ENPP1 deficiency), cortical nephrocalcinosis likely represents a consequence of ischemia (and can be seen either with ENPP1 or ABCC6 deficiency) [Ferreira et al, in press].
Cervical Spine Fusion
Fusion of the posterior elements of the cervical spine (posterior vertebral bodies, articular processes, laminae) was seen in four of 16 individuals with ENPP1 deficiency [Ferreira et al 2020].
Hearing Loss
In GACI, hearing loss can be conductive, sensorineural, or mixed, and can present as early as in the neonatal period [Brachet et al 2014]. It developed in ten of 16 survivors (63%) with ENPP1-GACI at a median age of 3.7 years, with a Kaplan-Meier estimate of developing hearing loss of 20% by age two years, 50% by four years, and 75% over a lifetime [Ferreira et al 2020].
Sensorineural hearing loss is presumably due to calcifications of the arteries supplying the inner ear [Lorenz-Depiereux et al 2010], while conductive hearing loss is due to stapedovestibular ankylosis [Nitschke et al 2012, Freychet et al 2014].
Development
Although cognitive development has not been formally assessed in a cohort of individuals with GACI, the majority appear to have normal development. However, the authors are aware of a few individuals with severe global developmental delay in the setting of prior strokes or encephalomalacia. In individuals with periarticular calcifications, motor milestones can be delayed due to pain around the affected joints [Authors, personal observation].
Variability
In one family in which the father and son were homozygous for the same ENPP1 pathogenic variant, the father presented with hypophosphatemia and rickets and later developed an aortic root dissection at age 28 years, while the son had GACI and hypophosphatemia [Lorenz-Depiereux et al 2010]. Sibs harboring the same pathogenic variants have been reported to have markedly different clinical courses [Ferreira et al 2020].
Prognosis
In a series of 55 children, the mortality rate at age six months was 30 of 55 (55%) despite intensive therapy [Rutsch et al 2008]. Only one individual died after age six months; thus, the mortality rate was markedly decreased in those who survived the first few months of life. Causes of death were myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, persistent arterial hypertension, or multiorgan failure.
Long-term survivors, with several in their 20s, include twins age 21 years [Rutsch et al 2008], a woman age 22 years [Marrott et al 1984], individuals age 25 and 26 years at last follow up [Ferreira et al 2020], and a woman age 37 years [Authors, personal observation]. The oldest individual with ENPP1 deficiency reported to date is a woman age 62 years [Saito et al 2011].
Bisphosphonate treatment was associated with survival beyond infancy in 11 of 17 individuals, while 18 of 26 individuals not treated with bisphosphonates died in infancy [Rutsch et al 2008] (see Treatment of Manifestations). It remains unclear whether bisphosphonate use improves survival [Authors, personal observation].
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
Marked phenotypic heterogeneity, even among surviving sibs with identical genotypes, argues against a genotype-phenotype correlation in GACI [Ferreira et al 2020].
Otero et al [2013] (full text; see Supporting Information, Appendix) reported an affected individual with biallelic ENPP1 pathogenic variants and a heterozygous pathogenic variant in ABCC6, which theoretically could have contributed to the severity of GACI. The individual’s healthy mother and brother both were doubly heterozygous for an ENPP1 pathogenic variant and the ABCC6 pathogenic variant; thus, it appears that the presence of one heterozygous ENPP1 pathogenic variant and one ABCC6 pathogenic variant does not cause GACI.
Nomenclature
In the past, generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI) has been variously referred to as idiopathic obliterative arteriopathy, infantile calcifying arteriopathy, occlusive infantile arteriopathy, medial coronary sclerosis of infancy, diffuse arterial calcifying elastopathy of infancy, and arteriopathia calcificans infantum.
Prevalence
GACI shows no ethnic or racial predilection, and has been described throughout the world.
The disease frequency is estimated at one in 200,000 pregnancies, and the carrier frequency at one in 223 individuals [Ferreira et al 2020].
Differential Diagnosis
Disorders with Vascular Calcification
Singleton-Merten syndrome (OMIM 182250 and 616298) is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by pathogenic variants in IFIH1 or DDX58.
- Severe aortic calcification, dental anomalies (delayed eruption and early loss of permanent teeth, alveolar bone erosion), osteopenia, and acroosteolysis are salient features of the disease [Feigenbaum et al 2013].
- Unlike generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI), aortic calcification in Singleton-Merten syndrome starts later in life (age range at diagnosis: 6-39 years).
Metastatic calcification due to hypervitaminosis D, hyperparathyroidism, or end-stage renal disease
- Diffuse arterial calcification tends to affect the media of the vessels, and extensive extravascular calcification involves the renal tubules, bronchial walls, and basal mucosa and muscularis mucosae of the stomach.
- Compared with GACI, metastatic calcification exhibits a different distribution of extravascular calcification, and the microscopic vascular changes occur in the media with little intimal proliferation.
Twin-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) and twin reversed arterial perfusion (TRAP) sequence
- Increased echogenicity due to calcification has been described in the wall of the pulmonary trunk, proximal branch pulmonary arteries [Saxena & Soni 2003, Bassil Eter et al 2009], and ascending aorta in the recipient twin of TTTS [Saxena & Soni 2003]. Pulmonary artery calcification has also been described in pump twins in TRAP sequence [Royston & Geoghegan 1983, Popek et al 1993]. Since this always occurs in the volume-overloaded fetus (recipient twin in TTTS and pump twin in TRAP sequence), it presumably results from increased cardiac output in utero [Popek et al 1993].
- Histologically, calcium is deposited primarily in the media [Popek et al 1993], whereas in GACI it is deposited along the internal elastic lamina. Additionally, in TTTS and TRAP sequence calcification does not occur elsewhere in the body [Saxena & Soni 2003].
Disorders with Occlusive Arteriopathy
Pediatric fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD). This non-inflammatory arteriopathy can be unifocal or multifocal, is associated with hypertension, and commonly affects the renal and mesenteric arteries and the abdominal aorta [Green et al 2016, Louis et al 2018], all common sites of stenosis in GACI. In fact, a child with a clinical diagnosis of pediatric FMD was eventually found to have ENPP1 deficiency [Ferreira et al 2020]; thus, other individuals with pediatric FMD could benefit from molecular genetic testing of ENPP1.
Grange syndrome (OMIM 602531) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by pathogenic variants in YY1AP1. This extremely rare syndrome is characterized by diffuse vascular stenoses with intimal thickening [Weymann et al 2001] in a distribution pattern resembling fibromuscular dysplasia, brachysyndactyly, and osteopenia with increased bone fragility [Grange et al 1998, Volonghi et al 2012].
Chronic arsenic poisoning. Diffuse thickening of the intima of medium- and small-sized arteries (without calcification) has been described in chronic arsenic poisoning, leading to death by myocardial infarction in children as young as age two years [Rosenberg 1974].
Management
No clinical practice guidelines for GACI have been published.
Evaluations Following Initial Diagnosis
To establish the extent of disease and needs in an individual diagnosed with generalized arterial calcification of infancy (GACI), the evaluations summarized in Table 4 (if not performed as part of the evaluation that led to the diagnosis) are recommended.
Table 4.
System/Concern | Evaluation | Comment |
---|---|---|
Cardiovascular | Referral to a pediatric cardiologist | Incl:
|
CT of chest, abdomen, & pelvis | To evaluate extent & distribution of vascular calcification | |
Serum levels of cardiac-specific troponin T or troponin I | Assess for evidence of myocardial ischemia. | |
Skeletal | Skeletal radiographs | As needed to assess for periarticular calcification or cervical spine fusion |
Mineral metabolism | Metabolic workup incl:
| To evaluate for evidence of hypophosphatemic rickets by measuring:
|
Hearing loss | Audiology assessment | Evaluate for conductive or sensorineural hearing loss. |
Genetic counseling | By genetics professionals 2 | To inform patients & families re nature, MOI, & implications of GACI in order to facilitate medical & personal decision making |
Family support/ resources | Assess:
|
GFR = glomerular filtration rate; MOI = mode of inheritance; PTH = parathyroid hormone
- 1.
Referral to a pediatric nephrologist is indicated in the setting of refractory hypertension
- 2.
Medical geneticist, certified genetic counselor, certified advanced genetic nurse
Treatment of Manifestations
Table 5.
Manifestation/ Concern | Treatment | Considerations/Other |
---|---|---|
Arterial calcification | Bisphosphonate therapy 1 using one of the following:
|
|
Hypertension | Standard therapy | Since hypertension in GACI is likely caused by renal artery stenosis, it may be beneficial to use ACE inhibitors or angiotensin II type 1 receptor blockers. |
Severe coronary stenosis | Aspirin therapy if coronary stenosis is present | |
PXE retinal changes | Intravitreal VEGF inhibitors for choroidal neovascularization | |
Hypophosphatemic rickets | Calcitriol (15-25 ng/kg/d) & oral phosphate supplement (25-50 mg/kg/d in 3-5 daily doses) | Doses adjusted based on alkaline phosphatase, PTH, & calciuria levels |
Orthopedics eval if bone deformities develop | Surgical interventions may be necessary. | |
Hearing loss | Hearing aids as indicated |
ACE = angiotensin-converting enzyme; PTH = parathyroid hormone; VEGF = vascular endothelial growth factor
- 1.
It remains unclear whether bisphosphonates (etidronate in particular) are associated with improved survival.
- 2.
Radiographic findings resembling hypophosphatasia include pan craniosynostosis, bowing of long bones, metaphyseal cupping and fraying, and radiolucent tongues.
- 3.
Radiographic findings resembling osteopetrosis include osteosclerosis and femoral Erlenmeyer flask deformity.
Surveillance
No specific guidelines address the issue of surveillance. The appropriate intervals for monitoring depend on clinical findings and need