Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Growth drug creates division

Some believe experiment­al medication that increases height will undermine ‘dwarf pride’

- By Serena Solomon

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — It’s a question many parents of children with dwarfism have contemplat­ed: If a medication could make them taller, would they give it to them?

Now, that possibilit­y is becoming less hypothetic­al. A study published earlier this month in the journal The Lancet found that an experiment­al drug called vosoritide increased growth in children with the most common form of dwarfism to nearly the same rate as in children without the condition.

The study has raised hope that the drug, if taken over the course of years, can make life easier for those with the condition, known as achondropl­asia, including the distant prospect of alleviatin­g major quality-of-life issues such as back pain and breathing difficulti­es.

But the drug has also ignited a contentiou­s debate in a community that sees “dwarf pride” as a hard-won tenet — where being a little person is a unique trait to be celebrated, not a problem in need of a cure.

Weeks before their son Lachlan was born, Dr.

Simone Watkins and her husband learned that he most likely had achondropl­asia, which affects about 1 in 25,000 infants.

After his birth, Watkins recalled, she and her husband said over him: “We love you. You’re perfect. We are so happy you’re here. You’re going to have a great life.”

She now feels that vosoritide could compromise that sentiment.

“I want him to have the best life possible with less complicati­ons and not to be bullied and to fit into society,” Watkins said as Lachlan, 2, played next to her in a pile of pillows at their home in Auckland. “But also, I don’t want to give him the message that he needs to change.”

Achondropl­asia is a genetic disorder that disrupts the transition of cartilage to bone. Those with the condition have shorter arms and legs than those found in people of average stature, as well as defining facial features. Their adult height is typically a little over 4 feet.

The study in The Lancet found that children who took the drug grew an additional 0.6 inches on average in one year, with minimal side effects. If taken over many years, vosoritide could produce a significan­t increase in adult height, although the study was limited to a year and does not address this possibilit­y, or resolve whether the medication can ease the medical complicati­ons common to dwarfism.

The trial examined 121 children ages 5 to 17 over a 12-month period. Participan­ts were located in seven countries.

In August, BioMarin, the American pharmaceut­ical company behind vosoritide, submitted the study’s findings to the Food and Drug Administra­tion as well as the European Medicines Agency. If approved, vosoritide could be available within months.

Vosoritide utilizes a synthetic form of a protein that humans produce naturally. It targets the overactive signal that prevents bone growth in children with achondropl­asia, said Dr. Ravi Savariraya­n, a clinical geneticist at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne, Australia, who led the trial.

Sarah Cohen, 11, who lives in Geelong, near Melbourne, started taking vosoritide at age 7 and continues to use it as part of

another trial.

At 4 feet, 1 inch tall, she has already reached what her full adult height could have been without vosoritide. In the early stages of her treatment, she dreaded the daily injections. “I got used to it,” she said, “and I am growing.”

That has produced some milestones that others might take for granted. When her family returned to a water park, she cleared the 4-foot height requiremen­t to use a waterslide for the first time. “There’s a real confidence that goes with those things,” said her father, Paul Cohen.

Megan Schimmel attributes much of her strength, compassion and empathy to living with achondropl­asia. She said that she wouldn’t want to change herself and that she isn’t going to change her daughter, Lily, 2, who also has the condition.

“I can do everything that someone a foot taller can do, with minor accommodat­ions,” Schimmel wrote in an email, adding that vosoritide sent a message that those with achondropl­asia “are broken.”

Melissa Mills, of Jacksonvil­le, Florida, who does not have the condition, said she had already decided that her daughter, Eden, 4, would use vosoritide if it is approved by the FDA.

Yes, Mills could get a $900 custom bike so her daughter could ride or

teach her to drive a car with pedal extenders, but she will embrace an alternativ­e. “With dwarfism, the world wasn’t built for my child, so if there is something I can do to help her navigate the world a little bit better and on her own, I want to do it,” she said.

After Eden’s diagnosis, Mills said, she joined every support group she could find to learn about her daughter’s condition. Her questions about treatments that increased height whipped up tension. “The more I got involved in the groups and the LPA” — the organi

zation Little People of America — “the more I pulled away.”

The debate over the drug resembles a decadeslon­g discussion among deaf people over cochlear implants, with some taking exception to the suggestion that they should be “fixed” with the device.

Vosoritide, said Mark Povinelli, LPA’s president, “is one of the most divisive things that we’ve come across in our 63-year existence.”

The organizati­on does not endorse specific treatments but encourages members to consider more than height in medical decisions. “We want to show that you can have a completely fulfilling life without having to worry about growth velocity,” said Povinelli, calling fixations on height a societal issue.

Watkins, the pediatric trainee in Auckland, said that she and her husband were leaning toward treating their son with vosoritide. It isn’t so much about the height, she said, but the potential quality-of-life benefits.

Still, Watkins wonders about the effects on Lachlan’s relationsh­ips with his peers who have dwarfism if he grows taller than they do. She also worries about the potential for negative side effects that did not show up in the trials.

For now, she will wait, if vosoritide is approved, to see how it continues to perform. “I don’t think it is very straightfo­rward,” she said.

 ?? CHRISTINA SIMONS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sarah Cohen, an 11-year-old with dwarfism, plays at home with her parents earlier this month in Geelong, Australia.
CHRISTINA SIMONS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Sarah Cohen, an 11-year-old with dwarfism, plays at home with her parents earlier this month in Geelong, Australia.
 ?? CHRISTINA SIMONS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sarah Cohen, 11, began taking vosoritide at age 7. At 4 feet 1 inch, she has already reached what her full adult height could have been without vosoritide.
CHRISTINA SIMONS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Sarah Cohen, 11, began taking vosoritide at age 7. At 4 feet 1 inch, she has already reached what her full adult height could have been without vosoritide.

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