| Literature DB >> 27561270 |
Christian J Hendriksz1,2, Kenneth I Berger3, Christina Lampe4, Susanne G Kircher5, Paul J Orchard6, Rebecca Southall7, Sarah Long8, Stephen Sande9, Jeffrey I Gold10.
Abstract
The mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) comprise a heterogeneous family of rare, genetic lysosomal storage disorders that result in severe morbidity and reduced life expectancy. Emerging treatments for several of these disorders have triggered the search for clinically relevant biomarkers and clinical markers associated with treatment efficacy in populations and individuals. However, biomedical measures do not tell the whole story when characterizing a complex chronic disorder such as MPS. Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) tools that utilize patient reported outcomes to address patient parameters such as symptoms (pain, fatigue, psychological health), functioning (activity and limitations), or quality of life, have been used to supplement traditional biomedical endpoints. Many of these HRQoL tools have demonstrated that quality of life is negatively impacted in patients with MPS. There is both the opportunity and need to formally standardize and validate HRQoL tools for the different MPS disorders.Entities:
Keywords: ADL; Clinical trial; EQ-5D; Enzyme replacement therapy; HRQoL; MPS HAQ; Mucopolysaccharidoses; Pain measurement; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27561270 PMCID: PMC5000418 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0503-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Important factors affecting HRQoL in patients with MPS. Some of the manifestations may also have a direct impact on ADL, participation in school/employment or social life (due to e.g. surgery, cognitive impairment)
Fig. 2Mobility impairment in the International Morquio A registry (including 326 patients with MPS IVA) [14], the Morquio A Clinical Assessment Program (MorCAP) (including 325 patients with MPS IVA) [11], the MPS VI Survey (including 121 patients with MPS VI) [13] and the Dutch MPS Survey (including 55 patients with MPS I, II, III, IV, and VI) [15]
PROs used in patients with MPS
| Name questionnaire | Acronym | Age range (yrs) | Assessment of | Completed bya | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symptom PROs | |||||
| Pain Visual Analog Scalesb | VAS | ≥8 | Pain intensity | Patient | |
| Adolescent Pediatric Pain Tool | APPT | 8–17 | Pain location, description and intensity | Patient | [ |
| Brief Pain Inventory Short Form | BPI-SF | Adults | Severity of pain, impact of pain on daily function, location of pain, use of pain medications, amount of pain relief | Patient | [ |
| Six-face Faces Pain Scale-Revised | FPS-R | ≥8 | Pain intensity | Patient | [ |
| Non-communicating Children’s pain Checklist-Revised | NCCPC-R | 3–18c | Pain-associated behavior | Observer | [ |
| Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment Adult Self Report | ASEBA ASR | 18–59 | Social-adaptive and psychological symptoms | Patient | [ |
| Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment Older Adult Self Report | ASEBA OASR | ≥60 | Social-adaptive and psychological symptoms | Patient | [ |
| Yatabe-Guilford Personality testd | Y-G test | NA | personality and psychiatric aspects | Patient | [ |
| Tree-drawing test (Baum test) | TDT | NA | personality and psychiatric aspects | Patient | [ |
| General Health Questionnaire 60 | GHQ-60 | Adolescents and adults | Mental health | Patient | [ |
| State-Trait Anxiety Inventory | STAI | Adolescents and adults | Anxiety | Patient | [ |
| Functioning PROs | |||||
| Health Assessment Questionnaire | HAQ | >18 | Functional capacity and independence in activities of daily living, pain, overall well-being | Patient | [ |
| Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire | CHAQ | ≤18 | Patient | [ | |
| Mucopolysaccharidosis Health Assessment Questionnaire | MPS HAQ | Children and adults | Self-care, mobility skills, extent of caregiver assistance in performing activities | Patient | [ |
| Hunter Syndrome-Functional Outcomes for Clinical Understanding Scale | HS-FOCUS | Children (>12) and adults | Impact of MPS II on function | Patient | [ |
| Modified version of the Functional Independence Measuree | FIM | Children and adults | Physical and cognitive disability | Observer | [ |
| Pediatric Evaluation of Disability inventory | PEDI | 0.5–7.5 | Capability and performance in self-care, mobility and social function | Patient or parentf | [ |
| Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales | VABS | Children and adults | Adaptive behavior | Parent/caregiver | [ |
| Behavior Assessment System for Children | BASC | Children | Emotional adjustment and adaptive behavior | Patient and/or parent | [ |
| Scales of Independent Behavior-Revised | SIB-R | Infancy-80+ | Adaptive behavior | Patient | [ |
| Health-related quality of life | |||||
| EuroQol 5D | EQ-5D | Versions for children (≥8) and adults (≥16) | Physical and mental health | Patient | [ |
| Short form-36 | SF-36 | ≥16 | Physical and mental health | Patient | [ |
| Health Utilities Index | HUI | ≥5 | Impact of disease and therapy | Patient or parent | [ |
| Pediatric Quality of Life inventory | PedsQL | Children | physical, emotional, social, and school functioning | Patient or parent | [ |
| TNO-AZL Preschool children Quality of Life | TAPQOL | 0.5–5 | Physical, social, cognitive, and emotional functioning | Parent | [ |
| TNO-AZL Children Quality of Life | TACQOL | 6–15 | Health status and children’s subjective emotional appraisal of their health | Patient or parent | [ |
| Childhood Health Questionnaire | CHQ | 5–18 | functional capacity and independence in activities of daily life | Patient and parent | [ |
| Impact on family/caregivers | |||||
| Pediatric Quality of Life inventory Family Impact Module | PedsQL Family Impact Module | Children | Parent’s problems in physical, emotional, social, and cognitive functioning, communication, worry, and problems specific to the family’s daily activities and family relationships | Parent | [ |
| Zarit Burden Interview | ZBI | Adult patients | Burden of caring on relationship, emotional well-being, social and family life, finances, control over one’s life | Parent/caregiver | [ |
aIn MPS studies
bPain VAS scores that have been used in MPS patients are included in the HAQ, CHAQ, EQ-5D, APPT
cPatients who are unable to speak because of intellectual impairments or disabilities
dJapanese version of the Guilford test
eAdapted for patients with MPS
fNormally completed by parent or observer
NA not available
Clinical studies assessing PROs in patients with MPS, excluding ERT trials
| Reference | MPS type | N | Age (yrs) | PRO instrument |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | MPS IH | 41 | NAa | VABS |
| [ | MPS IH | 47 | Mean 10.5 | VABS II |
| [ | MPS II | 27 | 5–41 | FIM |
| [ | MPS II | 10 | Mean 23.2 | FIM |
| [ | MPS II | 50 | Mean 6.0 | Different standardized tests for cognitive, adaptive, language, and motor functions |
| [ | MPS II | 29 | Mean 11.5 | MPS HAQ |
| [ | MPS II | 96 patients & caregivers | Mean 14.2 | CHAQ |
| [ | MPS II | 73 patients & parents | Mean 12.5 | PedsQL |
| [ | MPS II | 15 | 10.8 | VABS II |
| [ | MPS IVA | 326 | 1–73 | (C)HAQ |
| [ | MPS IVA | 325 | Mean 14.5 | MPS HAQ |
| [ | MPS IVA | 63 patients | 5–17 years ( | Patients: EQ-5D, APPT (<18 years)/BPI-SF (≥18 years), fatigue question |
| [ | MPS IVA | 20 | NA | ASEBA ASR/ OASR |
| [ | MPS VIA | 24 | 10–17 ( | EQ-5D |
| [ | MPS VI | 121c | 4–56 | (C)HAQ |
| [ | MPS I, II, III, IV, VI | 55 | Median 11.3 | MPS-specific questionnaire |
| [ | MPS I, II, IVA, IVB, VI | 81 | ≥18 | EQ-5D |
amean age at transplant was 21.7 months; mean years of follow-up from transplant was 67.2 months
bHS-FOCUS completed by 53 patients aged ≥12 years
cDisability, Pain and Arthritis scores for 91, 90, and 81 patients ≤18 years, respectively and Disability and Pain scores for 29 and 28 patients >18 years, respectively
dNCCPC-R was completed by parents of patients <8 years or with intellectual disability (N = 35) and the FPS-R by patients 8–18 years with no intellectual disability (N = 11); eight patients completed the Pain VAS, 16 patients over 18 years completed the SF-36; 35 participants (patients or parents) completed the PedsQL
NA not available
Clinical studies assessing the impact of ERT on PROs in MPS patients
| Reference | MPS type | Treatment | Comparator | N | Mean age (years)a | Study duration | PRO instrument |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | I | iv laronidase | Placebo | 45 | 15.6 | 26 weeks | (C)HAQ |
| [ | I | iv laronidase | / | 45 | 15.7 | 3.5 year | (C)HAQ |
| [ | I | iv laronidase | / | 5 | 12.0 | 6 year | Modified MPS HAQ |
| [ | I | iv laronidase | / | 7 | 16.3 | 52–208 weeks | MPS HAQ |
| [ | II | iv idursulfase | / | 94 | 14.5 | 2 years extension | (C)HAQ |
| [ | IVA | iv elosulfase alfa | Placebo | 176 | 15.3 and 13.1 | 24 weeks | MPS HAQ |
| [ | IVA | iv elosulfase alfa | / | 25 | 13.7 | 27 weeks | APPT |
| [ | VI | iv galsulfase | / | 5 | 11.0 | 48 weeks | (C)HAQ |
| [ | VI | iv galsulfase | / | 10 | 12.7 | 48 weeks | (C)HAQ |
| [ | VI | iv galsulfase | Placebo | 39 | 13.7 | 24 weeks | Joint pain and stiffness, physical energy level |
| [ | VI | iv galsulfase | / | 9 | NA | 2 years | (C)HAQ |
| [ | VI | iv galsulfase | / | 55 | 12.0 | 6.8 ± 2.2 years | (C)HAQ |
| [ | VI | iv galsulfase | / | 8 | 6.8 | 1.0–4.5 years | TAPQOL/TACQOLb |
aMean age at baseline from all patients or from ERT group
bThe TAPQOL was completed by the parents of four patients <6 years, TACQOL was completed by seven parents of patients ≥6 years
NA not available
Fig. 3Impact of MPS on self-care ADL as measured by the MPS HAQ in the MorCAP study including 325 patients with MPS IVA (mean age 14.5 years) [11]
Fig. 4Mean score for the five EQ-5D domains in 61 MPS IVA patients (adults and children) [28]
Comparison of HRQoL according to the EQ-5D utility value in MPS IVA (Morquio A) patients with different levels of mobility impairment and other serious chronic diseases
| Disease | HRQoL mean utilitya |
|---|---|
| MPS IVA: adults, no wheelchair [ | 0.846 |
| MPS IVA: adults, sometimes wheelchair [ | 0.582 |
| MPS IVA: adults, always wheelchair [ | 0.057 |
| Multiple sclerosis, walking-aid [ | 0.460 |
| Multiple sclerosis, bedridden [ | −0.195 |
| Moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis [ | 0.489 |
| Chronic ischaemic heart disease [ | 0.640 |
| Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus [ | 0.670 |
aEQ-5D utility scores were calculated using a time tradeoff method [78]. This generates scores ranging from −0.59 to 1, where 1 means full health and zero stands for death. Negative scores could be emotively interpreted as a health state “worse than death”. Tradeoff tariffs used differed depending on the ethnic background of patients
Fig. 5Level of assistance required from caregivers for performing daily activities as measured by the MPS HAQ in adult MPS IVA patients, according to wheelchair use [8]