Abstract

Introduction: Hypophosphatasia (HPP) is a rare inherited disease of mineral metabolism characterized by low activity of the tissue-nonspecific isoenzyme of alkaline phosphatase (TNALP), which causes an inability to liberate inorganic phosphate for hydroxyapatite crystal propagation as well as toxic accumulation of inorganic pyrophosphate, pyridoxal-5’-phosphate and urinary phosphoethanolamine. It has a prevalence of 1/100,000 to 1/900,000, although milder forms have an estimated prevalence of 1/6,370. Variable mutations in TNALP cause clinical expressions ranging from a severe perinatal form, which is often fatal after birth from pulmonary complications, to an infantile form, which can cause vitamin B6-responsive seizures, to an asymptomatic adult form. Case: A 27-year-old, ventilator-dependent female with osteoporosis, hypothyroidism, cerebral palsy with previous spinal fusion, seizure disorder and nephrocalcinosis presented with surgical site infection from a right femur ORIF she underwent a month ago. She had a history of microfractures and low-impact fractures of both femurs requiring several surgeries. Osteoporosis was diagnosed at age 5 and she had been on Fosamax ever since. She did not meet any developmental milestones as a baby and never reached menarche. Various diagnoses by multiple specialists did not fully explain her clinical presentation. Her medications included alendronate 5 mg, calcium carbonate 600 mg, ergocalciferol 400 U and levothyroxine 50 mcg. Physical exam showed poor dentition, a misshapen skull and bowed legs with contractures of her extremities. Her labs revealed Ca 9.1 mg/dL (8.4–10.2 mg/dL), albumin 3.2 gm/dL (3.5–5.2 gm/dL), phosphorus 5.1 mg/dL (2.5–4.5 mg/dL), alkaline phosphatase 32 U/L (35–105 U/L), PTH 28 pg/mL (15–65 pg/mL), vitamin D 33.5 ng/mL (30–100 ng/mL), C-telopeptide 509 pg/mL (34–635 pg/mL). A right knee X-Ray reported diffusely gracile and demineralized bones with muscular atrophy. She recently transitioned care from a pediatric endocrinologist to an adult endocrinologist, who tested her positive for heterozygous ALPL pathogenic variant hypophosphatasia and was considering her for asfotase alfa enzyme replacement therapy. Discussion: Our patient had infantile HPP, but due to misdiagnosis as osteoporosis, she was inappropriately treated with a bisphosphate for over 20 years. Treatment of HPP had been supportive until the approval of asfotase alfa (Strensiq) in October 2015. It is a bone-targeted human recombinant enzyme replacement therapy approved for infantile- and juvenile-onset HPP and has been shown to decrease mortality from 73% to 16% at age 5. With improvement in life-sustaining technology, more HPP patients are able to survive into adulthood. Awareness of the complex and polymorphic presentation of HPP by adult endocrinologists is paramount for accurate diagnosis, thus avoiding inappropriate treatments.

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