Vitamin D-Dependent Rickets Type 3: A Case Report and Systematic Review

AbstractAlthough vitamin D deficiency resulting from insufficient sunlight exposure or inadequate dietary vitamin D intake is the most common cause of rickets, mutations in genes involved in vitamin D metabolism can cause genetic forms of rickets termed Vitamin D-Dependent Rickets (VDDR). In 2018, Roizen et al. described a new type of VDDR, named VDDR3, caused by a recurrent missense mutation in theCYP3A4 gene  that leads to accelerated inactivation of vitamin D metabolites. Here, we describe the third case of VDDR3 due to the sameCYP3A4 mutation in a 2-year-old boy with bone deformities associated with poor growth. As in the previously reported cases, this patient had no family history of rickets. Serial measurements of vitamin D metabolites after a single 150,000  IU dose of cholecalciferol demonstrated an accelerated inactivation of 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D. Significant improvement in growth velocity and healing of bone deformities were achieved after a short period of treatment with 10.000 IU of cholecalciferol daily, showing the importance of early recogn ition and prompt precision therapy of this condition.
Source: Calcified Tissue International - Category: Orthopaedics Source Type: research