Crim-negative pompe disease patients with satisfactory clinical outcomes on enzyme replacement therapy

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Abstract

Pompe disease, especially in its infantile form, is a fatal disease. Most of the patients with this disease synthesize a nonfunctional form of the enzyme alpha glucosidase (GAA), the deficient enzyme in this disease. Patients producing some amount of this protein are labeled as cross-reactive immunologic material (CRIM)-positive. Few of them are unable to synthesize it and are labeled CRIM-negative. The clinical course of the disease has changed with the advent of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with recombinant alpha glucosidase enzyme (rhGAA). However, CRIM-negative patients have always been known to have poor outcome on ERT due to the development of anti-rhGAA antibodies in their bodies that neutralizes ERT efficacy. Here, we describe two CRIM-negative siblings on rhGAA ERT with unusually low anti-rhGAA antibody titer and good clinical outcome. Up to our current knowledge, this is the first report that describes such a good response to ERT in CRIM-negative patients.

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Khallaf, H. H. A., Propst, J., Geffrard, S., Botha, E., & Pervaiz, M. A. (2013). Crim-negative pompe disease patients with satisfactory clinical outcomes on enzyme replacement therapy. In JIMD Reports (Vol. 9, pp. 133–137). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/8904_2012_192

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