| Literature DB >> 33807115 |
Fabio Caputo1,2, Lisa Lungaro1,2, Adriana Galdi2, Eleonora Zoli2, Fiorella Giancola3, Giacomo Caio1,4, Roberto De Giorgio1, Giorgio Zoli1,2.
Abstract
Anderson-Fabry disease (FD) is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder leading to a wide array of clinical manifestations. Among these, gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, and diarrhea affect about half of the FD adults and more than half of FD children. GI symptoms could be the first manifestation of FD; however, being non-specific, they overlap with the clinical picture of other conditions, such as irritable bowel syndrome and inflammatory bowel disease. This common overlap is the main reason why FD patients are often unrecognized and diagnosis is delayed for many years. The present narrative review is aimed to promote awareness of the GI manifestations of FD amongst general practitioners and specialists and highlight the latest findings of this rare condition including diagnostic tools and therapies. Finally, we will discuss some preliminary data on a patient presenting with GI symptoms who turned to be affected by a variant of uncertain significance of alpha-galactosidase (GLA) gene.Entities:
Keywords: ERT; Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) like symptoms; fabry disease; gastrointestinal manifestation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33807115 PMCID: PMC8005161 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18063320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Studies investigating the effect of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) on gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms.
| Author, Year and Reference Number | ERT | GI Symptom Investigated | Months from the First ERT Administration | Number of | Age | Method of Investigation | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoffmann et al., 2007 [ | Algasidase Alfa. | Abdominal pain. | 12 | 62 FD patients (14 children, 48 adults; 21 females, 41 males). | Age of patients reporting overall GI symptoms | Interviews before and during ERT. Data on HRQoL of patients were collected by EQ-5D questionnaire. | Abdominal pain decreased from 49% (baseline value) to 39%. Both children and men reported a marked improvement of abdominal pain after 12 months of ERT ( |
| 24 | 58 FD patients (10 children and 48 adults; 25 females, 33 males). | Abdominal pain decreased from 43% (baseline value) to 29 % ( | |||||
| Diarrhea. | 12 | 60 FD patients (12 children and 48 adults; 21 females and 39 males). | Diarrhea decreased notably only in children, from 36% at the baseline to 7% after 12 months of ERT ( | ||||
| 24 | 57 FD patients (11 children and 48 adults; 25 females and 32 males). | Diarrhea significantly improved in children (from 45% of symptom reported at baseline to 27% after 24 months). | |||||
| Wilcox et al., 2018 [ | Agalsidase Beta. | Abdominal pain. | The observation interval started with the first ERT treatment and ended when one of the following occurred: (1) discontinuation of agalsidase beta treatment; or (2) switching of agalsidase beta treatment to another treatment. | 168 FD females patients. | Data describing abdominal pain were available for 166 patients, aged 43.3 ± 14.5 years at first ERT administration. | Self-reported GI symptoms at last clinical visit compared to treatment-baseline. | The number of women reporting abdominal pain and diarrhea dropped significantly from 45% (at baseline) to 31% at last follow-up ( |
| Diarrhea. | Data describing diarrhea were available for 160 patients, aged 43.1 ± 14.6 years at first ERT administration. | Diarrhea improved from 39% (baseline value) to 27% at the last follow-up ( | |||||
| Hopkin et al., 2020 [ | Agalsidase Beta. | Abdominal pain. | Median of 4.7 years of treatment. | 171 classic phenotype FD male patients. | Data for abdominal pain were available for 171 classic phenotype FD male patients, aged 36.2 years (28.9–43.7) at first ERT administration. | Self-reported GI symptoms at last clinical visit (≥0.5 year of follow-up) compared to treatment-baseline. | The number of classic patients with abdominal pain dropped significantly: 96 out of 171 (56%) vs. 70 out of 171 (41%) ( |
| Diarrhea. | 5.5 years of follow-up. | Data describing diarrhea were available for 169 classic phenotype FD male patients, aged 35.8 years (27.9–43.3) at first ERT administration (in brackets the 25th–75th percentile values). | The number of patients reporting episodes of diarrhea decreased significantly: 97 out of 169, (57%) vs. 80 out 169 (47%) ( |
Note: ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; FD, Fabry Disease; HRQoL, Health-Related Quality of Life; EQ-5 D, EuroQol- 5 Dimension questionnaire; SD, Standard Deviation.