Abstract

Background: Juvenile onset of primary osteoporosis is a rare skeletal disorder with a highly heterogenous clinical presentation and complex poorly understood genetic etiology. Low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5), a Wnt-β-catenin pathway receptor involved in bone mineral density (BMD) regulation, has been reported in children with primary osteoporosis mainly due to missense and frame-shift mutations. To our knowledge, there is only one report of in-frame deletions in exon 21 possibly being implicated in pregnancy related osteoporosis (1). We report the first case of a rare heterozygous de novo in-frame deletion in exon 21 of LRP5 gene in a girl with juvenile onset primary osteoporosis. Clinical Case: A 7.5 yo previously healthy European-African-American female born to non-consanguineous family, was noted to have left ankle and bilateral wrists fractures during sport activities occurring over the span of 1 y. On exam, she was of normal stature, had normal sclerae and vision, but was found to have hypermobile joints. Initial blood work revealed an elevated iPTH 72 pg/mL (9-59), normal Ca 9.6 mg/dL (8.9-10.4), and low 25OH-Vitamin D 17 ng/mL (30-100), which normalized with supplementation to 30.4 ng/mL. By 10.5 yo, she had sustained multiple sports related and pathologic fractures of long bones with progressive bone pain and functional ambulatory impairment. Radiographic evaluation showed osteopenia, multiple healed long bone fractures with presumed non-ossifying fibroma in the distal right femoral metaphysis, and subtle height loss of T4-5 vertebrae. CT bone densitometry at 12 yo showed low mean cancellous lumbar vertebral BMD of 190 mg/cm3 (ref. 285 ± 45) and normal cortical BMD of the femoral midshaft of 1977 mg/cm3 (ref. 2000 ± 60). Genetic testing for Osteogenesis Imperfecta returned negative for COL1A1 and COL1A2 mutations. Whole exome sequencing (WES) revealed a rare, de novo heterozygous mutation in exon 21 that involved deletion of nucleotides 4454 to 4465 resulting in an in-frame deletion of amino acid 1485 to 1488. This mutation is predicted to be deleterious by in silico analysis. Conclusion: We present the first case of a young female with progressive pathologic fractures, functional ambulatory impairment, and low BMD in childhood, consistent with juvenile onset primary osteoporosis. WES revealed a rare de novo heterozygous in-frame deletion mutation in LRP5, providing a plausible biological mechanism for her clinical presentation, and further contributing to the increasing genetic heterogeneity of juvenile onset primary osteoporosis and LRP5-related bone disorders. Reference: (1) Cook, F., Mumm, S., Whyte, M., Wenkert, D. Pregnancy-associated osteoporosis with a heterozygous deactivating LDL receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5) mutation and a homozygous methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHRF) polymorphism. JBMR. 2014;29 (4): 922-8.

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