28 February 2014 marks the seventh international Rare Disease Day coordinated by EURORDIS. On and around this day hundreds of patient organisations from more than 70 countries and regions worldwide are planning awareness-raising activities under the banner “Join Together for Better Care”.
As you know, Daisy has a very rare disease, Costello Syndrome. The chances of having a child with the sporadic mutation which causes the disease are 1:1.25m.
While we know she has a rare manifestation of the syndrome we have benefited from the collaboration which is taking place across the group of syndromes and diseases that fall within the same genetic pathway - this group is known as the "rasopathies"
When Daisy, was born, two months premature, in December 2004 the chance
she might have a rare disease did not cross my mind. I knew that following antenatal testing she did not have
Downs Syndrome or a known gene mutation so I just assumed that the problems she
was experiencing post birth were down to her early arrival. Until her consultant neonatologist
called me in and asked my permission to call in a geneticist.
Daisy
is one of around 250 in the world with Costello Syndrome. The mutation is on an oncogene, a cancer
causing gene, which means that she has a 15%, increased risk of developing malignant
tumours. Knowing this means
that we are able to screen her regularly for tumours and be vigilant in
watching for any suspicious changes.
The syndrome also affects growth, bones, the heart, development, vision
and the gastrointestinal system. We
contacted the Costello Syndrome support group and gained great comfort in
meeting other families with children who had similar features to Daisy, it was
good to no longer feel so alone with this rare and scary life-limiting
syndrome.
However when Daisy started developing problems which had not been documented in the Costello Syndrome literature before we were, to put it mildly, perplexed. Daisy did not grow out of the feeding issues (or at least become stable with them) as the literature suggests, infact she now has intestinal failure, she also developed neuropathic bladder and the icing on the cake has been the onset of uncontrolled, multi-focal epilepsy. Time after time we would post updates on the support group listserv hoping that another family might shine some light on what was happening with Daisy and we might be able to gain some reassurance that she was not so different from the Costello syndrome norm.
The
genetics team think that Daisy has an extreme manifestation of Costello
Syndrome, a manifestation which may have appeared before in other children but thanks
to excellent healthcare and early diagnosis she has survived the odds where
others did not. Our bloods have
been taken for exome testing, to see if there is some other genetic reason for
the severity of Daisy's symptoms.
But at the end of the day, it is what it is, we cannot change things,
but hopefully we, and the geneticists can learn from it. A syndrome is
ultimately a collection of symptoms on a continuum of severity and when it
comes to Costello Syndrome it seems that Daisy is the rarest of the rare.
Since
the mapping of the human genome the field of genetics has gone into warp drive.
Not only has the gene which
causes Costello Syndrome been identified, but a whole group of gene mutations
on the same gene pathway called Ras-MAPK have been identified, mutations which,
like the hras mutation which causes Costello Syndrome, are responsible for
other syndromes with similar phenotypes.
In 2009 the term "Rasopathy" was coined to group together
these syndromes which comprise Costello Syndrome, Noonan Syndrome,
Cardiofaciocutanenous Syndrome,
Noonan Syndrome with multiple Lentigines (formerly LEOPARD syndrome),
Neurofibromatosis Type 1, and
other rare conditions all caused by a mutation of a gene along this common gene pathway.
There are numerous overlapping phenotypic
features among the syndromes, including characteristic facial features, cardiac
defects, cutaneous abnormalities, neurocognitive delay and a predisposition to
malignancies. (Dr. Kate Rauen UCSF June 28, 2009).
Over the past few years
there has been a greater
collaboration within the research community to look at Rasopathies as a whole and their overlaps in order
to identify treatments to manage the impacts of these conditions. The bonus for our family of this wider
collaboration is that we now have found that some of the symptoms Daisy
exhibits which are not common in Costello Syndrome are well known in other
syndromes among the rasopathies.
For example, epilepsy is well documented in Cardiofaciocutaneous
syndrome and there are children with Noonan Syndrome who require intravenous
nutrition (TPN) in the same way that Daisy does.
The benefits of
collaboration in rare disease groups such as the rasopathies are multiple - in
the field of genetic research more
and more is being revealed on how the mutations on this pathway impact not only
the individual syndromes but diseases as a whole - The Ras/MAPK pathway is
essential in the regulation of the cell cycle, differentiation, growth and cell
senescence, all of which are critical to normal development.
From the point of view
of one family with a little girl with the rarest of the rare of syndromes in
the rasopathy group it means that we no longer feel so isolated and alone,
support groups are sharing information, joint conferences, research papers and
symposia are being held, in the States there are even rasopathy clinics with
doctors who are experts in this group of syndromes, and now a unified website for
us all to gather together wherever we are in the world (http://rasopathiesnet.org).
Now not only does Daisy
have her Costello family with whom she shares so many traits but she has an
extended family of ras-cousins, some of whom share some of her symptoms and
suddenly for our family rare does no longer means alone.
And this is the official Eurordis Video about Rare Disease Day 2014
Hopefully by reading this blog you now understand a bit more about rare diseases and the impact of collaboration, research and support has on families like ours. Please share this information, things are getting better for children like Daisy, now we know so much more about what is going on with her than before and that is all down to genetic research and collaboration across support groups.
I would not change Daisy for the world but I would change the way her rare disease impacts her quality of life and hopefully for future generations of children with rasopathies this is a possiblity.
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