Long-term effectiveness of enzyme replacement therapy in Fabry disease: results from the NCS-LSD cohort study

LJ Anderson, KM Wyatt, W Henley, V Nikolaou… - Journal of inherited …, 2014 - Springer
LJ Anderson, KM Wyatt, W Henley, V Nikolaou, S Waldek, DA Hughes, GM Pastores
Journal of inherited metabolic disease, 2014Springer
Objectives To determine the effectiveness of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) for adults
and children with Fabry disease. Design Cohort study including prospective and
retrospective clinical data. Age-and gender-adjusted treatment effects were estimated using
generalised linear mixed models. Treated patients contributed data before and during
treatment and untreated patients contributed natural history data. Participants Consenting
adults (N= 289) and children (N= 22) with a confirmed diagnosis of Fabry disease attending …
Objectives
To determine the effectiveness of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) for adults and children with Fabry disease.
Design
Cohort study including prospective and retrospective clinical data. Age- and gender-adjusted treatment effects were estimated using generalised linear mixed models. Treated patients contributed data before and during treatment and untreated patients contributed natural history data.
Participants
Consenting adults (N = 289) and children (N = 22) with a confirmed diagnosis of Fabry disease attending a specialist Lysosomal Storage Disorder treatment centre in England. At recruitment 211 adults and seven children were on ERT (range of treatment duration, 0 to 9.7 and 0 to 4.2 years respectively).
Outcome measures
Clinical outcomes chosen to reflect disease progression included left ventricular mass index (LVMI); proteinuria; estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR); pain; hearing and transient ischaemic attacks (TIA)/stroke.
Results
We found evidence of a statistically significant association between time on ERT and a small linear decrease in LVMI (p = 0.01); a reduction in the risk of proteinuria after adjusting for angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (p < 0.001) and a small increase in eGFR in men and women without pre-treatment proteinuria (p = 0.01 and p < 0.001 respectively). The same analyses in children provided no statistically significant results. No associations between time on ERT and pain, risk of needing a hearing aid, or risk of stroke or TIAs, were found.
Conclusions
These data provide some further evidence on the long-term effectiveness of ERT in adults with Fabry disease, but evidence of effectiveness could not be demonstrated in children.
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