Imagine being told your child has a rare immune disorder. Then years later, you learn that same condition could attack their brain.
That's the reality for families dealing with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, or WAS. This genetic disorder weakens the immune system from birth. It makes children prone to infections, bleeding, and certain cancers.
But here's what doctors have struggled to understand. When and how does WAS affect the brain?
A new systematic review published in Frontiers in Medicine brings together 26 studies covering 32 patients. It reveals a clearer picture than ever before. And the findings are sobering.
Four ways WAS attacks the brain
The research team sorted brain complications into four categories. Each one follows a different timeline.
Brain bleeding (hemorrhagic events) strikes earliest. The median age is just 1.2 years old. These happen because WAS affects blood platelets, making bleeding more likely.
Immune-mediated events come next, around age 3.8 years. The body's own defense system mistakenly attacks the brain.
Infectious complications appear much later, at a median age of 14.5 years. Most of these involve a virus called JC virus, which causes a severe brain infection known as progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML).
Cancers of the brain or lymph system show up across a wide age range, starting around age 5.
Think of it like a clock with four different alarm times. Each type of brain problem has its own window of risk.
The survival numbers tell a stark story
Here's where the data gets hard to read.
Infectious brain complications were 100% fatal in this review. Every single patient died.
Brain cancers had a 75% death rate. Brain bleeding killed 62.5% of patients.
But immune-mediated cases? Zero deaths.
This doesn't mean immune-mediated brain problems are harmless. They still require treatment. But they appear more survivable than the other types.
Overall, 59.4% of patients died from their neurological complication. That's nearly 6 out of 10.
A simple analogy for a complex problem
Picture the immune system as a security team for a building. In WAS, the security team is understaffed and poorly trained.
Sometimes the team fails to stop intruders (infections). Sometimes they accidentally damage the building's wiring (immune-mediated attacks). Sometimes the plumbing leaks because the pipes are faulty (bleeding). And sometimes, a few bad security guards start their own criminal operation inside (cancer).
Each problem requires a different response. And each has a different timeline for when it might happen.
What the study actually looked at
The researchers searched four major medical databases. They found 26 studies that described 32 patients with confirmed WAS who also had neurological symptoms.
Most patients were children. The median age at WAS diagnosis was just 0.4 years, or about 5 months old. Neurological symptoms appeared about 3 years later on average.
Some patients had received a bone marrow transplant (hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, or HSCT). This is currently the main treatment for WAS. But brain problems happened both before and after transplant.
But there's a catch.
The evidence comes from case reports and small case series. That's the weakest form of medical evidence. There were no large clinical trials, no controlled studies.
This means the numbers might not tell the full story. Some milder cases may never get reported. Some patients may have brain issues that go unnoticed.
What this means for families
If you or your child has WAS, these findings matter.
They suggest that doctors should monitor the nervous system regularly, not just the immune system. Brain scans and neurological exams should be part of routine care.
The timing matters too. Young children need monitoring for bleeding. Older children and teens need watching for infections and cancers.
Talk to your specialist about what screening makes sense. This review can't tell you exactly what to do. But it can start a conversation.
The limits of this research
The study has clear weaknesses. Only 32 patients were included. The data comes from published case reports, which may miss many patients. There's no standard way that neurological symptoms were measured across different studies.
Some categories had very few patients. The 100% death rate for infections came from just 6 cases. A larger study might show different numbers.
What happens next
The researchers call for better reporting. They want future registries to track neurological symptoms in WAS patients systematically.
This is how rare disease research moves forward. One case at a time. One review at a time. Each study adds a piece to the puzzle.
For now, the message is clear. WAS doesn't just affect the immune system. It can affect the brain too. And the earlier doctors look for problems, the better the chances of catching them in time.