Amazing Things: Gabby Mansour

With years of surgeries behind her, a teenager revels in the role of regular kid.

At first, newborn Gabby Mansour just seemed a little fussy. Then, one night, her mom, Michele DeLello, recalls, Gabby’s cries grew increasingly urgent. “I fed her and bathed her. I was doing everything I could to soothe her,” she says. But nothing seemed to help. “It was clear something was wrong.”

“Something is hurting this baby,” she remembers concluding.

The next day, she took Gabby to the pediatrician, who pronounced the 6-week-old perfectly healthy but perhaps a bit colicky. The doctor suggested switching formulas. When that didn’t work, the new mom and dad took Gabby to the emergency room.

Once Michele described how Gabby kept bending her right leg upward toward her belly, the triage nurse ordered X-rays. That’s when doctors discovered a fracture in Gabby’s tibia and fibula. “We know she didn’t fall. She’s not even weight-bearing,” Michele recalls telling them. “It was an absolute devastating shock. My head was spinning.”

Baffled by the situation, the new parents soon took Gabby to a pediatric orthopedist in search of answers. He diagnosed her right away. “This is probably the only case I’ll see in my career,” he told them before explaining that Gabby suffered from a rare disease called congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia. It had caused Gabby’s leg to spontaneously break. The bigger issue: The congenital condition, which affects 1 in 190,000 babies within the first two years of life, creates proteins that prohibit proper bone healing at the site. The most common treatment for this disorder at the time, he went on to say — and later internet research and more doctors confirmed — was amputation.

“Here was this beautiful baby and this mind-blowing news,” says Michele. “You can’t even wrap your head around that there’s no set treatment for it — even today. You just don’t know what the next step is.”

For months, they searched for alternatives while Gabby was in and out of casts and leg braces. At 10 months old, she had her first surgery, where a doctor inserted a rod to stimulate healing and offer some stability. Three months later, a second surgery was required to reposition a portion of the rod that had begun poking through her heel.

“Amputation was not an option for us and that’s why we were so persistent with finding a treatment plan for our child that we were comfortable with, and the right hospital and surgeon that we were comfortable with,” says Michele.

Just when things seemed most dire, Michele’s dad called with a serendipitous story. He had just gone to see his orthopedist about an elbow issue and, in passing, mentioned his granddaughter’s diagnosis. To his surprise, his doctor responded that his son, Dr. Michael Vitale, was a pediatric orthopedic surgeon at NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital in Manhattan and had just published research on Gabby’s disease.

“I still get chills,” says Michele, as she recounts the moment her hope was renewed. The next day, Michele made an appointment with Dr. Vitale for then-18-month-old Gabby.

“We will heal her leg,” Michele says Dr. Vitale told them on their first visit. “Amputation was not even part of the conversation and I just knew right away that Gabby was in the best hands. No doubt in my mind,” she says. He discussed Gabby’s future, quality of life and method of treatment.

Within a month of being outfitted with a new, more supportive leg brace, Gabby began walking and soon running just like any 2-year-old. A year later, she began taking ballet lessons.

“She wound up going to dancing school,” says Michele. “She had to wear the brace at all times, other than sleeping, but she really didn’t have limitations,” she says.

Over the next decade, Dr. Vitale performed nine surgeries on Gabby, the first of which involved replacing the original rod with a new one to better promote healing.

“She wound up going to dancing school. She had to wear the brace at all times, other than sleeping, but she really didn’t have limitations.”

— Michele DeLello

“We also treated her with a group of compounds called bone morphogenetic proteins,” says Dr. Vitale, who is currently the director of Pediatric Orthopedics and chief quality officer for the Department of Orthopedic Surgery. “These are proteins that allow bone to heal in areas, places and situations that would otherwise not happen.”

Each surgery meant Gabby would face weeks of rehabilitation, but that didn’t stop her from pursuing her passion for dancing and later singing and performing in musical theater. “She’s a superstar,” says Dr. Vitale.

By age 11, Gabby could finally ditch the leg brace altogether and pick up an exciting new activity, competitive cheerleading. Recalls Michele, “I remember telling Dr. Vitale, ‘She wants to do cheerleading,’ and he looked at me like ‘OK.’ He would have told us if she couldn’t. She liked to push the envelope a little bit,” Michele says proudly.

Dr. Vitale also performed two procedures on Gabby’s healthy left leg to slow its natural growth. This way, he could minimize any discrepancy between limbs and hopefully help Gabby avoid developing a long-term limp.

He also did what is called a bisphosphonate infusion. Bisphosphonates help with fracture healing and are an important part of the multipronged approach to treatment of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia. “That really sealed the deal,” says Michele.

Today, at 15, Gabby stands tall at 5 foot 2, and where there once was a 4-centimeter difference between her legs, it’s now a matter of millimeters. “It’s basically nonexistent,” Michele says.

Gabby’s last surgery took place in February 2016, when Dr. Vitale decided to remove the rod from her leg once and for all. “The rod had done its job,” says Michele. “It was just hanging out in there, and she was getting some ankle pain in the area, so we decided to just take it out and she’s perfectly fine.”

But it’s not lost on Gabby what she went through to get here. “I haven’t forgotten about everything, but there’s nothing keeping me thinking about it,” she says. “I don’t have any pain. I don’t find myself limping like I used to. So everything is really the most normal about it’s ever been for me.”

Her next checkup with Dr. Vitale is scheduled for March, though they’re comfortable with giving him a ring should something come up before then.

“You develop a relationship over so many years, and I had put my child’s life in his hands. He’s watched her grow,” Michele says of the family’s close rapport with Dr. Vitale.

Gabby and Dr. Vitale also share a special bond.

Now a sophomore at a performing arts high school in New Jersey, Gabby says she’ll be sure to invite Dr. Vitale to her Broadway debut one day. “He’ll get the first ticket,” she says with a huge grin.

She has already performed at Radio City Music Hall, where she had a small walk-on role in The Rockettes’ Christmas Spectacular in December 2015. So her stardom seems inevitable.

“I can’t wait to see her Broadway debut,” says Dr. Vitale.

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