| Literature DB >> 29625568 |
Tarekegn Geberhiwot1, Alessandro Moro2, Andrea Dardis2, Uma Ramaswami3, Sandra Sirrs4, Mercedes Pineda Marfa5, Marie T Vanier6, Mark Walterfang7, Shaun Bolton8, Charlotte Dawson8, Bénédicte Héron9, Miriam Stampfer10, Jackie Imrie11, Christian Hendriksz12, Paul Gissen13, Ellen Crushell14, Maria J Coll15, Yann Nadjar16, Hans Klünemann17, Eugen Mengel18, Martin Hrebicek19, Simon A Jones20, Daniel Ory21, Bruno Bembi2, Marc Patterson22.
Abstract
Niemann-Pick Type C (NPC) is a progressive and life limiting autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in either the NPC1 or NPC2 gene. Mutations in these genes are associated with abnormal endosomal-lysosomal trafficking, resulting in the accumulation of multiple tissue specific lipids in the lysosomes. The clinical spectrum of NPC disease ranges from a neonatal rapidly progressive fatal disorder to an adult-onset chronic neurodegenerative disease. The age of onset of the first (beyond 3 months of life) neurological symptom may predict the severity of the disease and determines life expectancy.NPC has an estimated incidence of ~ 1: 100,000 and the rarity of the disease translate into misdiagnosis, delayed diagnosis and barriers to good care. For these reasons, we have developed clinical guidelines that define standard of care for NPC patients, foster shared care arrangements between expert centres and family physicians, and empower patients. The information contained in these guidelines was obtained through a systematic review of the literature and the experiences of the authors in their care of patients with NPC. We adopted the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation (AGREE II) system as method of choice for the guideline development process. We made a series of conclusive statements and scored them according to level of evidence, strengths of recommendations and expert opinions. These guidelines can inform care providers, care funders, patients and their carers of best practice of care for patients with NPC. In addition, these guidelines have identified gaps in the knowledge that must be filled by future research. It is anticipated that the implementation of these guidelines will lead to a step change in the quality of care for patients with NPC irrespective of their geographical location.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Guidelines; Management; NPC; Niemann-Pick Type C
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29625568 PMCID: PMC5889539 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-018-0785-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Evidence levels and strength of recommendations
| Item | Definition |
|---|---|
| Level of evidence | |
| A. High-quality evidence | Further research is unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect. Consistent evidence from the RCTs without important limitations or exceptionally strong evidence from observational studies. |
| B. Moderate-quality evidence | Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate. Evidence from RCTs with important limitations (inconsistent results, methodologic flaws, indirect or imprecise), or very strong evidence from observational studies. |
| C. Low-quality evidence | Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate. Evidence for at least one critical outcome from observational studies, case series, or from RCTs with serious flaws, or indirect evidence, or expert’s consensus. |
| Strength of recommendation | |
| 1. Strong recommendation | Recommendation can apply to most patients in most circumstances. |
| 2. Weak recommendation | The best course of action may differ depending on circumstances or patient or society values. Other alternatives may be equally reasonable. |
Distribution of clinical forms of NP-C disease in large cohorts
| Neonatal systemic fatal (%) | Early infantile neurological onset (%) | Late infantile neurological onset (%) | Juvenile neurological onset (%) | Adolescent/adult neurological onset (%) | Total no. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early studies | ||||||
| France+ European countries [ | 12 | 30 | 23 | 30 | 5 | 125 |
| Spain [ | 7 | 37 | 21 | 25 | 11 | 57 |
| Italy [ | 7 | 26 | 32 | 23 | 12 | 43 |
| France [ | 9 | 26 | 22 | 26 | 16 | 107 |
| Recent studies | ||||||
| Germany [ | 3 | 3 | 35 | 54 | 5 | 37 |
| Czech Republic [ | 6 | 17 | 24 | 37 | 17 | 54 |
| UK [ | 5 | 6 | 39 | 32 | 19 | 132 |
| European countries [ | – | 11 | 31 | 31 | 27 | 145 |
Summary of Clinical signs and symptoms in NP-C, by age of onset
| Age at onset | Systemic manifestations | Neurological/psychiatric manifestations |
|---|---|---|
| Pre−/peri-natal (< 2 months) | Foetal ascites/hydrops | Hypotonia |
| Hepatosplenomegaly | ||
| Cholestatic jaundice | ||
| Thrombocytopenia | ||
| Pulmonary disease | ||
| Liver failure | ||
| Failure to thrive | ||
| Early-infantile (2 m to < 2 yrs.) | Hepatosplenomegaly or Splenomegaly (isolated or with neurological manifestations) | Central hypotonia |
| Prolonged neonatal jaundice | Dysphagia, spasticity | |
| VSGP | ||
| Late-infantile (2 to < 6 yrs.) | Hepatosplenomegaly or Splenomegaly (isolated or with neurological manifestations) | Developmental delay/regression, speech delay |
| History of prolonged neonatal cholestatic jaundice | Clumsiness, Frequent falls, | |
| Progressive ataxia, dystonia, dysarthria, dysphagia, | ||
| Seizures (partial/generalized) | ||
| Cataplexy | ||
| VSGP | ||
| Hearing loss | ||
| Juvenile (6 to 15 yrs.) | Hepatosplenomegaly or Splenomegaly (isolated or with neurological manifestations; often not present) | Poor school performance, learning disability. Loss of language skill |
| Frequent falls, clumsiness | ||
| Progressive ataxia, dysarthria, dystonia, dysmetria, dyskinesia, dysphagia | ||
| VSGP | ||
| Gelastic cataplexy | ||
| Behavioural problems | ||
| Adolescent/adult (> 15 yrs.) | Splenomegaly (often not present; isolated in very rare cases) | Cognitive decline, dementia, learning disability |
| Clumsiness, progressive motor symptoms, tremor, ataxia, dystonia/dyskinesia, dysarthria, dysphagia |
Clinical Severity assessment
| I. Functional disability scale (Modified from Pineda et al. [ | |
| Ambulation | Score |
| Normal | 0 |
| Clumsiness | 1 |
| Autonomous ataxic gait | 2 |
| Outdoor assisted ambulation | 3 |
| Indoor assisted ambulation | 4 |
| Wheelchair-bound | 5 |
| Manipulation | Score |
| Normal | 0 |
| Tremor | 1 |
| Slight dysmetria/dystonia (allows autonomous manipulation) | 2 |
| Mild dysmetria/dystonia (requires help for several tasks but is able to feed themselves) | 3 |
| Severe dysmetria/dystonia (requires assistance in all activities) | 4 |
| Language | Score |
| Normal | 0 |
| Delayed acquisition | 1 |
| Mild dysarthria (understandable) | 2 |
| Severe dysarthria (only comprehensible to some family members) | 3 |
| Non-verbal communication | 4 |
| Absence of communication | 5 |
| Swallowing | Score |
| Normal | 0 |
| Occasional dysphagia | 1 |
| Daily dysphagia | 2 |
| Nasogastric tube or gastric button feeding | 3 |
| Eye movements | Score |
| Normal | 0 |
| Slow ocular pursuit | 1 |
| Vertical ophthalmoplegia | 2 |
| Complete ophthalmoplegia | 3 |
| Seizure | Score |
| No | 0 |
| Yes, controlled by antiepileptic drugs | 2 |
| Yes, uncontrolled on two or more antiepileptic drugs of maximally tolerable dose | 4 |
| II. Neurocognitive Assessment | |
| Development (< 12 years old): | |
| O Normal | |
| O Mild learning delay | |
| O Moderate learning delay | |
| O Severe delay/plateau | |
| O Regression | |
| Memory (> 12 years old): | |
| O Normal | |
| O Mild impairment | |
| O Moderate | |
| O Difficult following commands | |
| O Unable to follow commands | |
Fig. 1Niemann-Pick disease type C laboratory diagnosis algorithm. Modified from: Patterson et al. [36, 47]. Abbreviations: GD: Gaucher disease; ASMD: acid sphingomyelinase deficiency; EM: electron microscopy; VUS: variant of unknown significance; MLPA: Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification (evaluates copy number changes, allows detection of large deletions or false homozygous status with a deletion on the other allele); lysoSM: lysosphingomyelin. aElevated cholestane-triol or bile acid derivative and/or lysoSM-509, with normal or slightly elevated lysoSM. bCholestane-triol also elevated in ASMD, acid lipase deficiency, cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis, certain neonatal cholestasis conditions. All lysoSM analogues and bile acid derivative are elevated in ASMD. cI-cell disease (ML-II and -III) gives a false positive result (very different clinical features). dASMD can give a similar filipin pattern. eCheck allele segregation by parental study or other test
Multidisciplinary assessments of patients with NPC
| Discipline | Features of NPC for which this discipline may be of assistance | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Primary care physician | Assist with general medical care; coordinate specialists; provide support for family | Expert opinion |
| Metabolic diseases specialist | Diagnosis of NPC and exclusion of other disorders in the differential diagnosis; ongoing patient assessment for disease progression and response to therapy | [ |
| Neurologist | Cataplexy, movement disorders, dystonia, and seizures | [ |
| Psychiatrist | Psychosis, behavioural disturbances, depression | [ |
| Neuro-ophthalmologist | Diagnosis (vertical gaze palsy) and assess response to therapy (changes in saccadic eye movement velocity) | [ |
| Anaesthesiologist | Assess for anaesthetic risk as needed | [ |
| Neuropsychologist | Assess for cognitive involvement at baseline and in response to therapy | [ |
| Speech and language therapist | Assess for dysphagia and aspiration risk; speech therapy for children | Expert opinion |
| Occupational and physical therapists/Rehabilitation physician | Assess development and develop aids and home adjustments as needed for patients with communication and physical challenges | [ |
| Orthopaedic surgeon | Assess the need for surgical correction of severe scoliosis, osteo-articular retractions, spasticity treatments and hip problems. | Expert opinion |
| Nutritionist/Gastroenterologists | Assess nutritional status in patients who may be losing weight due to dysphagia or side effects of therapy; Gastrostomy tube insertion when swallowing is unsafe. | [ |
| Social worker | Support of patients and families living with disabilities who require enhanced resources in the community | Expert opinion |
| Genetic counsellor | Provide counselling for families as to recurrence risk and options for prenatal diagnosis if desired | [ |
Recommended assessments
| Recommended assessment | Rationale | Frequency | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline history | Establish current level of disease severity and retrospectively estimate rate of progression | At diagnosis | [ |
| Interval history | Establish rate of disease progression; monitor for compliance with and side effects from therapy; monitor for conditions which would prompt discontinuation of therapy | 6 months | [ |
| Physical examination | Document growth parameters, assess for neurological features and organomegaly | At diagnosis then every 6–12 months | [ |
| NPC clinical severity score | Document key features of disease at diagnosis, progression and response to therapy | At diagnosis and then every 6 months | [ |
| Neuropsychiatric evaluation | Document and treat psychiatric manifestations and response to therapy | At diagnosis then every 6–12 months | [ |
| Developmental or cognitive assessment | Document baseline degree of cognitive impairment and monitor response to therapy | At diagnosis; every 6 months in children; every 12 months in adults | [ |
| Ophthalmology evaluation | Document saccadic eye movement velocity and presence of gaze palsy at baseline and document response to miglustat therapy in treated patients | At diagnosis; at 6 and 12 months; after starting treatment; frequency after 12 months can be determined by clinical response | [ |
| Audiometry | Document presence of hearing loss | At diagnosis then every 12 months | [ |
| Swallowing assessment | Clinical swallowing assessment in all patients; videofluoroscopic swallowing (VFS) assessment may be useful in some patients; Document presence of dysphagia and aspiration and response to therapy | At diagnosis and then every 6 months in children; in adults, frequency could be reduced to every 12 months if asymptomatic and disease is stable | [ |
| Neuroimaging | Magnetic resonance imaging or more detailed forms of neuroimaging including MR spectroscopy and diffusion tensor imaging | At baseline if available; Decisions about follow up neuroimaging will depend on local availability and need for general anaesthesia | [ |