| Literature DB >> 28644838 |
Mindell Seidlin1, Robert Holzman2, Pamela Knight1, Bruce Korf3, Vanessa Rangel Miller4, David Viskochil5, Annette Bakker1.
Abstract
The neurofibromatoses (neurofibromatosis type 1, neurofibromatosis type 2 and schwannomatosis) are rare disorders having clinical manifestations that vary greatly from patient to patient. The rarity and variability of these disorders has made it challenging for investigators to identify sufficient numbers of patients with particular clinical characteristics or specific germline mutations for participation in interventional studies. Similarly, because the natural history of all types of neurofibromatosis (NF) is variable and unique for each individual, it is difficult to identify meaningful clinical outcome measures for potential therapeutic interventions. In 2012, the Children's Tumor Foundation created a web-based patient-entered database, the NF Registry, to inform patients of research opportunities for which they fit general eligibility criteria and enable patients to contact investigators who are seeking to enroll patients in approved trials. Registrants were recruited through CTF-affiliated NF clinics and conferences, through its website, and by word-of-mouth and social media. Following online consent, demographic information and details regarding manifestations of NF were solicited on the Registry website. Statistical analyses were performed on data from a cohort of 4680 registrants (the number of registrants as of October 9, 2015) who met diagnostic criteria for one of the 3 NF conditions. The analyses support our hypothesis that patient-reported symptom incidences in the NF Registry are congruent with published clinician-sourced data. Between April 26, 2013 and July 8, 2016, the registry has been useful to investigators in recruitment, particularly for observational trials, especially those for development of patient-reported outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28644838 PMCID: PMC5482445 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Enrollment by type of NF and sex.
| Type | Female (Sex %) | Male (Sex %) | Total (Disorder %) |
|---|---|---|---|
| NF1 | 2261 (56.2) | 1759 (43.8) | 4020 (85.8) |
| NF2 | 346 (59.8) | 233 (40.2) | 579 (12.3) |
| SCHW | 48 (59.3) | 33 (40.7) | 81 (1.9) |
| Total | 2655 (56.7) | 2025 (43.3) | 4680 (100) |
Enrollment by age at diagnosis and type of NF.
| Age Group (Years) | NF1 (%) | NF2 (%) | SCHW (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Less than 5 | 2635 (65.5) | 54 (9.3) | 0 | 2689 (57.5) |
| 5–9 | 482 (12.0) | 74 (12.8) | 1 (1.2) | 557 (11.9) |
| 10–20 | 432 (10.7) | 195 (33.7) | 6 (7.4) | 633 (13.5) |
| Over 20 | 348 (8.7) | 248 (42.8) | 73 (90.1) | 669 (14.3) |
| Uncertain | 123 (3.1) | 8 (1.4) | 1 (1.2) | 132 (2.8) |
| Total | 4020 (100) | 579 (100) | 81 (100) | 4680 (100) |
Enrollment by type of NF and race.
| Race | NF1 (%) | NF2 (%) | SCHW (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 3116 (85.2) | 465 (12.7) | 67 (1.8) | 3648 (77.9) |
| African-American | 224 (95.7) | 10 (4.3) | 0 (0) | 234 (5.0) |
| Asian | 159 (82.8) | 30 (15.6) | 3 (1.6) | 192 (4.1) |
| Native American or Inuit | 115 (88.5) | 10 (7.7) | 5 (3.8) | 130 (2.8) |
| Pacific Islander | 43 (82.7) | 8 (1.9) | 1 (1.9) | 52 (1.1) |
| Other | 287 (87.0) | 39 (11.8) | 4 (1.2) | 330 (7.1) |
| Unknown | 76 (80.9) | 17 (18.1) | 1 (1.1) | 94 (2.0) |
| Total | 4020 (85.9) | 579 (12.4) | 81 (1.9) | 4680 (100) |
Enrollment by geographic area and type of NF.
| Geographic Area | NF1 (%) | NF2 (%) | SCHW (%) | Total (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | 3543 (88.1) | 455 (78.6) | 66 (91.8) | 4064 (86.8) |
| Europe | 234 (5.8) | 60 (10.4) | 12 (14.8) | 306 (6.5) |
| Australia-Oceania | 121 (3.0) | 21 (3.6) | 0 | 142 (3.0) |
| Asia | 43 (1.1) | 16 (2.8) | 1 (1.2) | 60 (1.3) |
| South America | 58 (1.4) | 22 (3.8) | 2 (3.0) | 82 (1.8) |
| Africa | 12 (0.3) | 2 (0.3) | 0 | 14 (0.3) |
| Caribbean | 9 (0.2) | 3 (0.5) | 0 | 12 (0.3) |
| Total | 4020 (100) | 579 (100) | 81 (100) | 4680 (100) |
Selected population characteristics of U.S. registrants compared to U.S. Census estimates.
| NF1 (N) | NF2 (N) | SCHW (N) | U.S. Population (N) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 55.7% (1902) | < 0.001 | 61.0% (258) | < 0.001 | 54.7% (35) | 0.64 | 50.8% (163 280 761) |
| White | 79% (2698) | < 0.01 | 85.8% (363) | < 0.001 | 82.8 (53) | 0.37 | 77.1% (247 813 910) |
| Black or African- American | 6.3% (215) | < 0.001 | 2.4% (10) | < 0.001 | 0 | 0.002 | 13.3% (42 748 704) |
| Native American or Inuit | 3.2% (108) | < 0.001 | 1.9%(8) | 0.17 | 7.8% (5) | < 0.001 | 1.2% (3 857 026) |
| Total | 100% (3417) | 100% (423) | 100% (64) | 100% (321 418 820) |
p* = Binomial test versus proportion in U.S. population
Selected past or current manifestations of NF1 among 4020 registrants.
| Manifestation | Present (%) | Absent (%) | Unsure (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cutaneous neurofibromas | 2645 (65.8) | 1209 (30.1) | 166 (4.1) |
| Any learning disability | 2048 (50.1) | 1063 (26.4) | 532 (13.2) |
| Lisch nodule | 1823 (45.3) | 1353 (33.6) | 844 (20.1) |
| NF1-related pain | 1719 (42.8) | 2301 (57.2) | -- |
| Plexiform neurofibromas | 1390 (34.5) | 1598 (39.8) | 1032 (25.7) |
| Bone fracture | 922 (22.9) | 2935 (73.0) | 163 (4.1) |
| Spinal or paraspinal neurofibromas | 876 (21.7) | 2501 (62.2) | 643 (16.0) |
| Optic gliomas | 763 (19.0) | 2596 (64.6) | 661(16.4) |
| Long bone bowing | 492 (12.2) | 2995 (74.5) | 533 (13.3) |
| Attention Deficit Disorder | 258 (6.4) | 3230 (80.3) | 532 (13.2) |
| Malignant Peripheral Nerve SheathTumors | 78 (1.9) | 3245 (80.7) | 697 (17.3) |
Frequencies of various manifestations of NF1 in clinician-reported studies compared with NF registry.
| Data Source | YEAR | ADULTS/ CHILDREN | Self/ Clinician | Single/ Multicenter | SUBJECTS | PN % | OPG | MPNST | FRECK | LISCH | TIBIAL | LD/ ADHD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Friedman [ | 1997 | A & C | C | M Intl | 1728 | 23 | NA | 5 | NA | 59 | 2 | |
| Huson [ | 1989 | A & C | C | S Wales | 135 | 32 | 1.5 | 70 | 85 | 4 | 33 | |
| McKeever [ | 2008 | C | C | M N Ireland | 75 | 6.7 | 42 | 6 | 5.3 | 49 | ||
| Cnossen [ | 1998 | C | C | S Rotterdam | 150 | 26.6 | 11.3 | 85.3 | 52 | 2 | ||
| Nemethova [ | 2013 | Collection of NF | C | S Slovakia | 108 | 31 | 85 | 36 | ||||
| Overweg-Plandsoen [ | 1997 | C & A | C | S Netherlands | 196 | 10 | 92 | 93 | ||||
| Boulanger [ | 2005 | C | C | S Montreal | 279 | 24.7 | 14.7 | 1.8 | 59.6 |
PN = Plexiform neurofibroma; OPG = Optic pathway glioma; MPNST = Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor; FRECK = skin-fold freckling; LISCH = Lisch nodules; LD/ADHD = Learning disability/Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
Selected manifestations of NF2 among 579 registrants.
| Manifestation | Yes (%) | No (%) | Unsure (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Balance problems | 471 (81.3) | 108 (18.6) | -- |
| Vestibular schwannomas | 461 (79.6) | 54 (9.3) | 64 (11.1) |
| Tinnitus | 433 (74.8) | 146 (25.2) | -- |
| Hearing loss | 425 (73.4) | 154 (26.6) | -- |
| NF2-related pain | 391 (67.5) | 188 (32.5) | -- |
| Facial weakness | 329 (57.5) | 250 (43.2) | -- |
Studies using the registry for recruitment.
| Start Date | Population | Type of study | Email sent | Email opened(%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Apr 2013 | NF1, Tibial bowing | Observational | 256 | 10541% |
| 2 | Mar 2014 | NF1, NF2—Adult | Intervention: Behavioral | 1465 | 5538% |
| 3 | May 2014 | NF1, NF2—Adolescent | Observational: Focus Group | 813 | 24730% |
| 4 | Sep 2015 | NF1, NF2—Adolescent | Intervention: Behavioral | 1840 | 59532% |
| 5 | Jul 2015 | NF1, ages 16–34, plexiform neurofibroma | Intervention: Behavioral | 1019 | 27127% |
| 6 | May 2015 | NF1, ages 3–31, MPNST | Intervention: Drug -Phase II | 668 | 29042% |
| 7 | Mar 2015 | NF2, ages 12–40,vestibular schwannoma | Intervention: Drug –Phase II | 141 | 4733% |
| 8 | Dec 2014 | NF1, ages2-18,plexiform neurofibroma | Observational- Focus group | 366 | 10128% |
| 9 | Apr 2015 | NF1 ages 8–12, plexiform neurofibroma | Observational- Focus group | 154 | 4429% |
| 10 | Jun 2015 | NF1 ages 5–7,plexiform neurofibroma | Observational- Focus group | 640 | 25139% |
| 11 | May 2013 | NF1 ages 7–16 | Observational | 500 | 27254% |
| 12 | Mar 2014 | NF1, MPNST* | Intervention: Radiation | 39 | 1846% |
| 13 | Jul 2013 | NF1, breast cancer | Observational | 3 | 267% |
| 14 | Feb 2015 | NF1, parents of affectedchildren | Observational | 1605 | 65741% |
| 15 | Mar 2016 | NF1, Adult, UK,plexiform neurofibroma | Observational: QoLquestionnaire development | 37 | 12 32% |
| 16 | Mar 2015 | NF1, pain | Observational: Questionnairedevelopment | 3187 | 113335% |
| 17 | Oct 2015 | NF1, NF2, SCHW | Analysis of registry data,clinic accessibility | 4617 | NA |
| 18 | Sep 2015 | NF1 pediatric | Observational: QoL fieldtesting | 3574 | 118833% |
MPNST* = Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor.