| Literature DB >> 31512765 |
Laurent Gouya1,2,3, Paolo Ventura4, Manisha Balwani5, D Montgomery Bissell6, David C Rees7, Ulrich Stölzel8, John D Phillips9, Raili Kauppinen10, Janneke G Langendonk11, Robert J Desnick5, Jean-Charles Deybach1,2,3, Herbert L Bonkovsky12, Charles Parker9, Hetanshi Naik5, Michael Badminton13, Penelope E Stein7, Elisabeth Minder14, Jerzy Windyga15, Radan Bruha16, Maria Domenica Cappellini17, Eliane Sardh18, Pauline Harper18, Sverre Sandberg19, Aasne K Aarsand19, Janice Andersen19, Félix Alegre20, Aneta Ivanova21, Neila Talbi1,2,3, Amy Chan22, William Querbes22, John Ko22, Craig Penz22, Shangbin Liu22, Tim Lin22, Amy Simon22, Karl E Anderson23.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Acute hepatic porphyria comprises a group of rare genetic diseases caused by mutations in genes involved in heme biosynthesis. Patients can experience acute neurovisceral attacks, debilitating chronic symptoms, and long-term complications. There is a lack of multinational, prospective data characterizing the disease and current treatment practices in severely affected patients. APPROACH ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31512765 PMCID: PMC7255459 DOI: 10.1002/hep.30936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatology ISSN: 0270-9139 Impact factor: 17.425
Patient Demographics and Disease Characteristics in EXPLORE
| Variable | Patients (n = 112) |
|---|---|
| Age in years | 38 (19‐70) |
| Female sex | 100 (89) |
| Ethnicity | |
| White | 95 (85) |
| Asian | 3 (3) |
| Black | 3 (3) |
| Not provided | 11 (10) |
| Geographic region | |
| Europe | 63 (56) |
| United States | 49 (44) |
| AHP type | |
| AIP | 104 (93) |
| HCP | 3 (3) |
| VP | 5 (4) |
| Relative with known or suspected AHP | 83 (74) |
| Time since first attack in years | 8.0 (0.5‐41.1) |
| Number of attacks in the last 12 months | 6 (0‐52) |
| Number of attacks in the last 12 months requiring hemin treatment and/or hospitalization | 4 (0‐50) |
| Number of patients reporting attacks in the last 12 months | |
| 0 attacks | 6 (5) |
| 1‐2 attacks | 6 (5) |
| 3‐5 attacks | 42 (38) |
| 6‐10 attacks | 22 (20) |
| >10 attacks | 36 (32) |
| Patients experiencing chronic AHP symptoms | 73 (65) |
| Patients who received prior hemin treatment for attacks | 94 (84) |
| Current hemin prophylaxis | 52 (46) |
| Weekly dosing | 22 (42) |
| Monthly dosing | 10 (19) |
| Unknown dosing | 4 (8) |
| Other | 16 (31) |
| Time in years on hemin prophylaxis | 5 (0‐26) |
Data are presented as n (%) or median (range).
Figure 1Percentage of patients reporting attack or chronic symptoms at baseline. (A) Attack symptoms and (B) chronic symptoms. Symptom categories (pain, mood/sleep, GI, and other) were used when collecting data from patients to aid the reporting process. Chronic symptoms between attacks were reported by 73 (65%) patients; percentages are based on these 73 patients. Abbreviation: GI, gastrointestinal.
Characteristics of Attack Treatment During EXPLORE
| Variable | AIP (n = 104) | VP and HCP (n = 8) | Total (n = 112) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total attacks | 458 | 25 | 483 |
| Requiring hemin or treatment at a health care facility | 360 (79) | 11 (44) | 371 (77) |
| Attacks by treatment location | |||
| Home | 133 (29) | 15 (60) | 148 (31) |
| Health care facility | 324 (71) | 10 (40) | 334 (69) |
| Inpatient ward | 156 (34) | 5 (20) | 161 (33) |
| Infusion center | 62 (14) | 2 (8) | 64 (13) |
| Clinic office | 58 (13) | 3 (12) | 61 (13) |
| Emergency room | 47 (10) | 0 (0) | 47 (10) |
| Unknown | 1 (<1) | 0 (0) | 1 (<1) |
| Treatment type | |||
| Hemin | 323 (71) | 9 (36) | 332 (69) |
| Opioids | 250 (55) | 12 (48) | 262 (54) |
| Other (carbohydrates, NSAIDs, other) | 202 (44) | 15 (60) | 217 (45) |
Data are presented as n (%).
Abbreviation: NSAID, nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug.
Characteristics of Attacks Requiring Treatment at a Health Care Facility and/or Hemin Administration Experienced During EXPLORE
| Variable | AIP (n = 104) | HCP and VP (n = 8) | Total (n = 112) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of attacks | 2 (0‐37) | 1 (0‐4) | 2 (0‐37) |
| Attack duration per subject (days) | 6.7 (3.4) | 15.1 (18.1) | 7.3 (6.0) |
| AAR | 2.0 (0.0‐37.0) | 1.3 (0.0‐4.2) | 2.0 (0.0‐37.0) |
| AAR by region | |||
| Europe | 1.0 (0‐37.0) | 1.2 (1.0‐1.5) | 1.0 (0‐37) |
| US | 3.3 (0.0‐15.9) | 1.5 (0.0‐4.2) | 2.1 (0.0‐15.9) |
| AAR by hemin prophylaxis | |||
| Yes | 2.5 (0.0‐20.0) | 3.1 (1.9‐4.2) | 2.5 (0.0‐20.0) |
| No | 2.0 (0.0‐37.0) | 1.0 (0.0‐2.0) | 1.5 (0.0‐37.0) |
| AAR by daily symptoms | |||
| Yes | 2.0 (0.0‐22.3) | 1.0 (0.0‐4.2) | 2.0 (0.0‐22.3) |
| No | 2.8 (0.0‐37.0) | 1.9 (1.0‐2.0) | 2.0 (0.0‐37.0) |
Data are presented as median (range) or mean (SD). AAR is annualized attack rate, calculated (number of attacks ÷ time on study).
At study entry or on study.
At study entry.
Figure 2Urine ALA, PBG, and ALAS1 mRNA measurements during the study for all AHP types. (A) ALA, (B) PBG, and (C) ALAS1 mRNA. The vertical lines represent the most extreme point within 1.5 interquartile ranges. The bottom and top edges of the box indicate intraquartile range. The line inside the box indicates the median value. Nonattack mean is the average of all samples collected (excluding those taken during an attack or when affected by hemin treatment) for each patient. Attack peak is the maximum value recorded during an attack for each patient. Abbreviation: cr, creatinine.
Figure 3Patients reporting problems affecting QoL across the five dimensions of EQ‐5D‐5L.