Approach to the Patient with Achondroplasia - New Considerations for Diagnosis, Management and Treatment

J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2025 Jan 15:dgaf017. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgaf017. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Achondroplasia is the most common disproportionate short-stature skeletal dysplasia. Features associated with achondroplasia are rhizomelia, macrocephaly, midface hypoplasia, and typical cognition. Potential medical complications include foramen magnum stenosis, hydrocephalus, middle ear dysfunction, obstructive and central sleep apnea, spinal stenosis and genu varum. Recently, vosoritide, a CNP analogue, was approved by the FDA with the primary indication of increasing linear growth in all children with achondroplasia and open growth plates. Due to this, pediatric endocrinologists suddenly are encountering infants and children with achondroplasia in their clinic whose families are seeking treatment with vosoritide. There is an urgent need to provide practical guidance pertaining to the diagnosis, management and surveillance of these patients. Specific to current clinical use of vosoritide and other growth-modulating therapies in development for patients with achondroplasia, it is important to recognize that 1. some children and their families do not automatically desire such treatment, 2. not all treated children exhibit a response in linear growth, and 3. treatment does not negate the necessity of actively surveilling for the potential complications of achondroplasia which are part of its natural history. The goal of this paper is to provide probable, contemporary clinical scenarios of infants and children with achondroplasia who may present to an endocrinologist. This information is especially crucial to the endocrinologist when there is no specialized skeletal dysplasia center near the family.

Keywords: CNP; achondroplasia; foramen magnum stenosis; skeletal dysplasia; vosoritide.