Detailing Diagnosis
Despite the role of this gene mutation, progeria does not run in families. Instead, the mutation is believed to stem from a chance anomaly in the sperm or egg prior to conception.
The disease has traditionally been diagnosed only through physical exam and X-rays. Misdiagnosis has been common, but a genetic blood test that provides a more definitive diagnosis has recently become available.
Treatments for Today and Tomorrow
While there is no treatment for progeria, according to the Progeria Research Foundation, there are steps parents and doctors can take to improve a child's quality of life. For example, children with progeria often have poor appetites, and certain nutritional supplements, such as Pediasure and Boost, can help them get the nutrition and calories they need. This, in turn, can improve their mood, energy levels and skin and hair health.
Likewise, physical or occupational therapy two to three times a week can help children stay active. Additionally, daily low-dose aspirin therapy may be recommended to prevent heart disease, as it is in at-risk adults.
Parents and children with progeria are hopeful that the future will bring therapies that treat the underlying genetic abnormalities. The recent NCI study is a step in that direction.
"There's a lot of work going into these gene therapies, where you get the body to either not read or process a bad message from a gene, or not to express the bad message and cause mischief," says Dr. Leslie Smoot, a pediatric cardiologist and the director of the congenital cardiovascular genetics program at Children's Hospital in Boston.
However, Smoot is quick to point out that it’s a long road from accomplishing this in a lab to successfully treating a child.
But the fact that researchers now know it’s possible to reverse the cellular defects associated with progeria is “hugely helpful,” she says.
As for the prevention of heart disease in children with progeria, Smoot says that the next step in research will be to understand the relationship between the lamin A protein and HDL cholesterol levels. Such research, she believes, could have "huge implications for everybody."
"Aging and heart disease are the two most significant issues for most people in Western society," Smoot points out, "so anything we learn along about progeria might provide clues for the general population."