Drug to treat children with form of dwarfism approved in Australia

A controversial drug that increases growth in children with a common form of dwarfism has recently been approved for use in Australia. Daisy’s son Casper has achondroplasia and was faced with the decision to be part of the vosoritide drug trial, which could change his expected height.

 Daisy and Casper at trial appointment

Daisy and Casper at a drug trial appointment. Source: Dateline

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Achondroplasia, the most common form of dwarfism, is a rare genetic disorder that impacts bone growth, affecting around 1 in 25,000 children worldwide. People with achondroplasia can face a lifetime of health complications, including spinal column narrowing, spinal cord compression, and bowed legs. 

The drug vosoritide - when injected once a day in young children - has been found to reverse the effects of dwarfism and allows children to grow to average height.    

Daisy’s son Casper has achondroplasia and in 2021 Dateline followed his parent's decision to be part of the vosoritide drug trial, which could change his expected height. 
An average two-year-old grows about six centimetres a year, while a child with achondroplasia grows about four centimetres a year. When bone growth stops in early adulthood, the result is a dramatic reduction in height and proportions.  

According to the research, when vosoritide is administered as a daily injection, a molecule within the drug interferes with the faulty gene pathway allowing bones to grow at a regular rate.   

Daisy says, “ultimately the decision to become a part of the trial wasn't aesthetic or cosmetic. 

“I love Casper the way he is and a lot of my decision was rooted in [future] health complications and avoiding as much of that as possible.”  
Daisy, Justin and Casper on his birthday.
Daisy, Justin and Casper on his birthday. Source: Supplied
Professor Ravi Savarirayan conducted the trial at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne. He hopes that this drug will help with the medical complications some children with achondroplasia face.  

“For instance, there's an increased risk of sleep-disordered breathing, having to have an operation on your spine. In the first five years, the incidence of sudden infant death syndrome is 50 times that of a child without achondroplasia.” 

Eighty per cent of children with achondroplasia are born to average-height parents.  

Professor Savarirayan says he is grateful for the trust that parents like Daisy put in him.  

“It's a hugely courageous thing to do - she's putting her trust in us, in me, that this medication is going to benefit her child and not harm her child. So they are the absolute heroes of this.” 
Becky is a motivational speaker and disability rights activist and she is fearful of the drug trial.
Becky is a motivational speaker and disability rights activist and she is fearful of the drug trial. Source: Dateline

A firm identity

For some, dwarf pride was hard-won - and the drug threatens an identity short-statured people have spent generations fighting for. 

“People assume that it's socially acceptable to pick us up and throw us across the room… People treat people with dwarfism as non-humans,” said Becky Curran, a disability rights advocate in the United States.  

The United States is home to an estimated 30,000 people with forms of dwarfism - and Becky is one of them.  

Becky is a member of the short-statured community organisation Little People of America. She says the biggest challenge facing her is the prejudice of the average height world.  

“I don't think me being a foot taller would add any additional value to my life. I'm who I am because of the way I was made."

For Becky, vosoritide’s development represents many of the hurdles her community has been facing.   

“Parents are fearful because they don’t have enough evidence of what the future can be like for their child [with Achondroplasia]. 
Prof Ravi Savarirayan is the lead clinical geneticist in drug trial.
Prof Ravi Savarirayan is the lead clinical geneticist in drug trial. Source: Dateline

A big change

The study involved 121 children enrolled in seven countries around the world.

In July, Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration approved vosoritide, sold as VOXZOGO, for use.

For Caspar, the impact of participating in the trial was a daily injection at home, followed by frequent hospital visits for intensive testing and study. 

“There's a lot of work that goes into it. It's tough at times. But he's the love of my life and I just want to do as much as possible,” said Daisy.  

Daisy spent the first few months of motherhood diving into the world Caspar would be a part of -  joining online mums groups with other children with achondroplasia, spending hours online researching the short-statured community in Australia.  

“I had anxieties about what his future would look like, what his life would look like,” says Daisy.  

“As his parents at the moment, you know, we have a duty of care as it were. We want to give him the best start. So we are two average height parents, but two average height parents doing the best we can.” 

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Dateline is an award-winning Australian, international documentary series airing for over 40 years. Each week Dateline scours the globe to bring you a world of daring stories.
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4 min read
Published 20 April 2021 6:05am
Updated 13 September 2022 2:18pm
By Hareem Khan


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