| Literature DB >> 28228103 |
Margaret M McGovern1, Ruzan Avetisyan2, Bernd-Jan Sanson2, Olivier Lidove3,4.
Abstract
Acid sphingomyelinase deficiency (ASMD), a rare lysosomal storage disease, is an autosomal recessive genetic disorder caused by different SMPD1 mutations. Historically, ASMD has been classified as Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) types A (NPD A) and B (NPD B). NPD A is associated with a uniformly devastating disease course, with rapidly progressing psychomotor degeneration, leading to death typically by the age of 3 years, most often from respiratory failure. In contrast, the clinical phenotype and life expectancy of patients with NPD B may vary widely. Almost all patients have hepatosplenomegaly and an atherogenic lipid profile, and most patients have interstitial lung disease with progressive impairment of pulmonary function and hematologic abnormalities including cytopenias. Other common clinical manifestations include liver dysfunction, heart disease, skeletal abnormalities and growth delays. Some patients with ASMD who survive beyond early childhood have intermediate phenotypes (variant NPD B) characterized by combinations of non-neurologic and mild to severe neurologic symptoms. The physical and psychosocial burden of illness in patients with NPD B is substantial. Common symptoms include shortness of breath, joint or limb pain, abdominal pain, bleeding and bruising. The disease often leads to chronic fatigue, limited physical or social activity and difficulties in performing daily activities or work. Many patients die before or in early adulthood, often from pneumonia/respiratory failure or liver failure. Available treatments are limited to symptom management and supportive care. An enzyme replacement therapy currently in clinical development is expected to be the first treatment addressing the underlying pathology of the disease. Early diagnosis and appropriate management are essential for reducing the risk of complications. While knowledge about ASMD is evolving, more evidence about ASMD and the natural history across the disease spectrum is needed, to improve disease recognition, timely diagnosis and appropriate disease management.Entities:
Keywords: ASMD; Acid sphingomyelinase deficiency; Burden of illness; Disease manifestations; Lysosomal storage disorder; Natural history; Niemann-Pick disease types A and B
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28228103 PMCID: PMC5322625 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-017-0572-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Classification of patients with ASMD based on historical terms
| NPD type A | Intermediate NPD, variant NPD B | NPD type B |
|---|---|---|
| Phenotype: Infantile onset of severe neurodegeneration with progressive psychomotor deterioration | Phenotype: NPD B phenotype but also progressive neurologic findings including ataxia, variable degrees of developmental delay and peripheral neuropathy | Phenotype: Chronic progressive multi-system disease with no or little neurologic involvement |
ASMD acid sphingomyelinase deficiency, NPD Niemann-Pick disease
Observational studies of ASMD clinical burden since 2004
| Reference | Study type | Patients | Objective/Evaluation | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lidove et al. 2016 [ | Retrospective | NPD B ( | Clinical phenotype, laboratory tests | High frequency of MGUS |
| Cassiman et al. 2016 [ | Retrospective | NPD B/variant NPD B ( | Cause of death, morbidity | Overall leading causes of death were respiratory failure and liver failure |
| Acuña et al. 2015 [ | Retrospective | NPD B: | Epidemiology, phenotype | Moderate to severe NPD B with normal cognitive and psychomotor development |
| McGovern et al. 2013 [ | Prospective | NPD B, | Morbidity, survival, cause of death | NPD B is a life-threatening disorder with morbidity and mortality, especially in children |
| Wasserstein et al. 2013 [ | Prospective | NPD B, | Skeletal manifestation (comparative analysis with healthy controls) | Significant association between reduced bone marrow mineral density and increased splenomegaly |
| Zhang et al. 2013 [ | Retrospective | ASMD, | Genotype, phenotype | Comparatively high incidence of NPD A in the Chinese population |
| Hollak et al. 2012 [ | Retrospective/ prospective | ASMD, | Clinical phenotype | In NPD B patients, pulmonary disease is the most debilitating clinical feature |
| Thurberg et al. 2012 [ | Phase 1 trial (rhASM), (baseline data) | Adults (18–65 years) with ASMD, | Liver and skin pathology | Liver fibrosis in almost all patients. Variable sphingomyelin accumulation; high sphingomyelin accumulation associated with liver enlargement |
| Henderson et al. 2009 [ | Prospective qualitative case study |
| Psychosocial burden of disease | Limited physical activity and social isolation and peer rejection are major stressors, particularly for patients 10–16 years |
| McGovern et al. 2008 [ | Prospective cross-sectional survey | NPD B, | Suitable endpoints for future clinical trials, (clinical assessments, imaging, QoL [CHQ-PF50, SF-36], laboratory tests) | NPD B patients have multi-system involvement and clinical variable phenotypes. Almost all had splenomegaly, hepatomegaly and interstitial lung disease. Common symptoms: bleeding (49%), pulmonary infections (42%), shortness of breath (42%) and joint/limb pain (39%); low platelets, abnormal lipid values and liver function tests. Delayed growth in adolescence. Mild decrease in QoL with standard instruments |
| Guillemot et al. 2007 [ | Retrospective |
| Lung disease | All patients had signs of interstitial lung disease, 1 patient died of respiratory failure, 5 required long-term oxygen therapy |
| Mihaylova et al. 2007 [ | Prospective | Intermediate NPD, | Phenotype/genotype relationship | Variable neural involvement in patients with intermediate NP and identical genetic background |
| McGovern et al. 2006 [ | Prospective longitudinal | NPD A, 10 patients (3–6 months at study entry) | NPD A natural history | All infants had severely impaired cognitive and motor development, cherry-red spots; median survival from diagnosis was 21 months; cause of death was respiratory failure (9 patients) and complications from bleeding (1 patient) |
| Mendelson et al. 2006 [ | Prospective | NPD B, | Pulmonary findings | Interstitial lung disease was present in most patients; there was no quantitative correlation between imaging findings and lung function |
| Wasserstein et al. 2006 [ | Prospective | NPD B/intermediate NPD, | Prevalence of neurologic disease | 10/64 patients had mild hypotonia or hyporeflexia; 5/64 patients had significant progressive neurologic abnormalities including cognitive impairment |
| Pavlů-Pereira et al. 2005 [ | Retrospective | ASMD, | Phenotype | Description of an intermediate phenotype with overt, borderline or subclinical neurologic symptoms of neuronopathy |
| McGovern et al. | Prospective | Children with ASMD, | Lipid abnormalities | All children had lipid abnormalities including low HDL, high LDL and/or high TG |
| McGovern et al. | Prospective | NPD B, | Ocular manifestations | 15/45 patients had macular stigmata with no evidence of neurodegeneration |
| Wasserstein et al. 2004 [ | Prospective longitudinal | NPD B, | NPD B natural history | The natural history of NPD B is characterized by hepatosplenomegaly with progressive hypersplenism, worsening atherogenic lipid profile, gradual deterioration in pulmonary function and stable liver dysfunction |
ASMD acid sphingomyelinase deficiency, CHQ-PF50 Child Health Questionnaire – Parental Form 50 for pediatric patients, HDL high-density lipoprotein, LDL low-density lipoprotein, MGUS monoclonal gammopathy of unknown significance, NPD Niemann-Pick disease, Qol quality of life, rhASM recombinant human ASM, SF-36 Short-Form 36, TG triglycerides
aReports baseline observational data from a phase 1 clinical trial
Fig. 1ASMD manifestations in patients with NPD B, in the currently published literature. ALT alanine amino transferases; ASMD acid sphingomyelinase deficiency; AST aspartate amino transferase; BMC bone mineral content; BMD bone mineral density; NPD Niemann-Pick disease