Abstract

Cartilage-hair hypoplasia (CHH) is an autosomal recessive syndromic immunodeficiency with skeletal dysplasia, short stature, hypotrichosis, variable degree of immune dysfunction and increased incidence of anaemia, Hirschsprung disease and malignancy. CHH is caused by variants in the RMRP gene, encoding the untranslated RNA molecule of the mitochondrial RNA-processing endoribonuclease, which participates in for example cell cycle regulation and telomere maintenance. Recent studies have expanded our understanding of the complex pathogenesis of CHH. Immune dysfunction has a major impact on clinical course and prognosis. Clinical features of immune dysfunction are highly variable, progressive and include infections, lung disease, immune dysregulation and malignancy. Mortality is increased compared with the general population, due to infections, malignancy and pulmonary disease. Several risk factors for early mortality have been reported in the Finnish CHH cohort and can be used to guide management. Newborn screening for severe combined immunodeficiency can possibly be of prognostic value in CHH. Regular follow-up by a multidisciplinary team should be implemented to address immune dysfunction in all patients with CHH, also in asymptomatic cases. Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation can cure immune dysfunction, but its benefits in mildly symptomatic patients with CHH remain debatable. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms behind the variability of clinical features, to search for potential molecular treatment targets, to examine and validate risk factors for early mortality outside the Finnish CHH cohort and to develop management guidelines. This review focuses on the pathogenesis, clinical course and management of CHH.

Highlights

  • Cartilage-hair hypoplasia (CHH, OMIM # 250250) is a rare form of skeletal dysplasia, and a syndromic primary immunodeficiency disorder

  • The degree of rRNA cleavage impairment has been linked to the severity of bone dysplasia in CHH.[9]. These results suggest that RMRP variants interfere with normal cell cycle through pleiotropic effects including altered gene regulation, inadequate functioning of silencing RNAs and defective ribosome biogenesis

  • T-cell abnormalities in individuals with telomeropathies consist of depletion of naive T cells and accumulation of effector memory CD8+ cells, echoing the typical pattern of T-cell pathology in CHH.[36]. These findings suggest the pathogenetic role of impaired telomere maintenance in the development of immunologic abnormalities in CHH

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Summary

Funding information

This work was supported by the Sigrid Jusélius Foundation (OM), the Academy of Finland (OM), the Folkhälsan Research Foundation (OM), the Novo Nordisk Foundation (OM), the Helsinki University Hospital Research Funds (MT, OM), the Swedish Childhood Cancer Foundation (OM) and the Foundation for Pediatric Research (MT, OM).

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Findings
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