Hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia: pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment.
File(s)Shovlin. Blood Reviews 2010.pdf (606.9 KB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Shovlin, CL
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia, inherited as an autosomal dominant trait, affects approximately 1 in 5000 people. The abnormal vascular structures in HHT result from mutations in genes (most commonly endoglin or ACVRL1) whose protein products influence TGF-ß superfamily signalling in vascular endothelial cells. The cellular mechanisms underlying the generation of HHT telangiectasia and arteriovenous malformations are being unravelled, with recent data focussing on a defective response to angiogenic stimuli in particular settings. For affected individuals, there is often substantial morbidity due to sustained and repeated haemorrhages from telangiectasia in the nose and gut. Particular haematological clinical challenges include the management of severe iron deficiency anaemia; handling the intricate balance of antiplatelet or anticoagulants for HHT patients in whom there are often compelling clinical reasons to use such agents; and evaluation of apparently attractive experimental therapies promoted in high profile publications when guidelines and reviews are quickly superseded. There is also a need for sound screening programmes for silent arteriovenous malformations. These occur commonly in the pulmonary, cerebral, and hepatic circulations, may haemorrhage, but predominantly result in more complex pathophysiology due to consequences of defective endothelium, or shunts that bypass specific capillary beds. This review will focus on the new evidence and concepts in this complex and fascinating condition, placing these in context for both clinicians and scientists, with a particular emphasis on haematological settings.
Date Issued
2010-11
Date Acceptance
2010-09-25
Citation
Blood Reviews, 2010, 24 (6), pp.203-219
ISSN
1532-1681
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
203
End Page
219
Journal / Book Title
Blood Reviews
Volume
24
Issue
6
Copyright Statement
© 2010, Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Identifier
PII: S0268-960X(10)00029-9
Subjects
Humans
Telangiectasia, Hereditary Hemorrhagic
Notes
Writing this systematic review took two years, requiring generation of new data; synthesis of materials from diverse fields; discussions with major UK stakeholders on screening; and incorporation of international guidelines that were then still ’ in press’, but were already four years out of date. Between April –October 2011, when the website for this prestigious haematology journal listed download rates, the article was in the all time top 10 downloaded articles. this is translating to a rapid rise in citations. The manuscript provides a conceptual framework for the whole patient, incorporating familial, population and longitudinal concepts that are difficult to appreciate from conventional peer reviewed articles with a particular focus. The manuscript refocuses pathophysiolgy in a disease that was at risk of being defined by over-simplistic concepts, phenotypes defined in mouse models not always related to HHT, and pharmaceutical hype regarding therapies lacking an appropriate evidence base. The manuscript educates clinicians (most of whom are organ-specific specialists or sub-specialists), to improve management in this complex and highly challenging disorder. For the NHS, the manuscript used systematic review to highlight that recommendations for intensive screening programmes derived in other healthcare cultures may be neither affordable, nor appropriate, for the UK.
Publication Status
Published