| Literature DB >> 35135579 |
Derralynn A Hughes1,2, Patrício Aguiar3,4, Olivier Lidove5, Kathleen Nicholls6,7, Albina Nowak8,9, Mark Thomas10, Roser Torra11, Bojan Vujkovac12, Michael L West13, Sandro Feriozzi14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Variable disease progression confounds accurate prognosis in Fabry disease. Evidence supports the long-term benefit of early intervention with disease-specific therapy, but current guidelines recommend treatment initiation based on signs that may present too late to avoid irreversible organ damage. Findings from the 'PRoposing Early Disease Indicators for Clinical Tracking in Fabry Disease' (PREDICT-FD) initiative included expert consensus on 27 early indicators of disease progression in Fabry disease and on drivers of and barriers to treatment initiation in Fabry disease. Here, we compared the PREDICT-FD indicators with guidance from the European Fabry Working Group and various national guidelines to identify differences in signs supporting treatment initiation and how guidelines themselves might affect initiation. Finally, anonymized patient histories were reviewed by PREDICT-FD experts to determine whether PREDICT-FD indicators supported earlier treatment than existing guidance.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac; Chaperone therapy; Consensus; Enzyme replacement therapy; Fabry disease; Guideline; Neurological; Patient-reported outcome; Renal; Treatment initiation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35135579 PMCID: PMC8822651 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-022-02181-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Timeline of publication of latest guidelines for FD and of disease-specific therapy approvals. As of December 31, 2017, agalsidase alfa was approved in 58 countries, excluding the USA. FD, Fabry disease
Renal signs: guideline stipulations and PREDICT-FD consensus [11]
| Histological damage (kidney biopsy) | Podocyte inclusions | Proteinuria | Elevated urine ACR (including microalbuminuria) | Abnormal GFRa | Decline in iohexol GFR | Renal dialysis or transplant | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PREDICT-FDb [ | + | + | – | + | + | + | – |
| EFWGc [ | No consensus | No consensus | M, I; F, IIB | M, I; F, IIB | CKD stage 2: cM, I; ncM, IIA; cF, IIA; ncF, IIB CKD stage 3: cM, I; ncM, IIB; cF, IIB; ncF, IIB | – | Dialysis, do not withhold treatment Transplant, NA |
| Australia [ | Alld | – | M, > 150 mg/d F, > 300 mg/d | Me,f > ULN | – | – | – |
| Canadag [ | M, Fh | Renal pathology: M, major criterion F, minor criterion | All, ≥ 500 mg/di All, ≥ 300 mg/di | – | All, CKD stage ≥ 2j | Decline in mGFR | All (considered CKD stage 5) |
| Catalonia (Spain) | – | – | All, > 300 mg/d | All | All, CKD stage ≥ 2k | – | All |
| Francel [ | F | – | F, > 1 g/d | – | F, moderate-to-severe | – | All |
| Portugal [ | Confirmatory biopsy if needed, all asymptomatic | Confirmatory biopsy if needed, all asymptomatic | All | All | All, CKD stage ≥ 2 | – | – |
| Slovenia (FCGHSG) | Confirmatory biopsy if needed in cF and in late-onset adultsm | – | All | All | All CKD | – | – |
| Switzerlandn | Fo | Fn | F, > 300 mg/dp | – | – | – | Alln |
| UKq [ | – | – | All, > 300 mg/dr | – | All, CKD stage 2 and 3s | – | – |
Unpublished guidelines are summarized in Additional file 1: Table S1
aCKD: stage 2, 60–90 mL/min/1.73 m2; stage 3, 45–60 mL/min/1.73 m2
bConsensus was reached that FD-specific treatment should be initiated at diagnosis in male patients aged 16 years or older who are asymptomatic for organ involvement, in boys younger than 16 years old with early indicators of organ involvement, and in all patients with guideline indicators of organ involvement
cRecommendations are based on class of evidence assigned: class I, treatment recommended or indicated; class IIA, treatment should be considered; class IIB, treatment may be considered; class III, treatment not recommended
dIncluding disease due to long-term renal accumulation of glycosphingolipids
eIn two samples separated by at least 1 day
fIn male patients, guideline abnormal albumin threshold of > 20 µg/minute is approximately equivalent to the threshold for microalbuminuria (> 30 mg/d)
gTreatment initiated based on one major or two minor criteria. Minor criteria not shown are renal tubular dysfunction and hypertension for at least 1 year
hIf biopsy is indicated, glomerular sclerosis, tubulointerstitial atrophy, fibrosis, or vascular sclerosis constitute a major criterion in male patients and a minor criterion in female patients; biopsy not required for treatment initiation
iMajor criterion: persistently ≥ 500 mg/d/1.73m2; minor criterion: ≥ 300 mg/d/1.73m2 in isolation or > normal and persisting for at least 1 year
jMajor criterion: CKD stage 2 based on three consistent eGFRs over at least 4 months or stages 3–5 based on two consistent eGFRs over at least 2 months using CKD-EPI formula [27] in adults and the Counahan–Barrett formula [28] in children; also ≥ 15% decrease in GFR or slope greater than the age-related normal among those with hyperfiltration (GFR ≥ 135 mL/min/1.73 m2) determined by nuclear medicine techniques. Minor criterion: hyperfiltration in two measurements at least 1 month apart
kReduced rate in at least three determinations by CKD-EPI equation [27]
lAll male patients with a confirmed FD diagnosis should be offered ERT from age 18 years; ERT may be considered in children (6–18 years) with organic renal involvement
mAlso if necessary in asymptomatic boys with a classical mutation
nERT is practically always indicated in men, even those with mild symptoms and low organ involvement, and in patients undergoing hemodialysis or with a kidney transplant
oRelevant, histologically proven Gb3 deposits in kidney or heart biopsies
pRegardless of CKD stage
qFD-specific therapy should be considered in male patients with classical mutations at diagnosis; tabulated additional considerations apply to male and female patients with later-onset disease
rPersistent proteinuria > 300 mg/d in male patients; use anti-proteinuria medication for at least 12 months if proteinuria is the only presentation in female patients
sCKD stage 2 based on three or more consistent GFR estimates over at least 12 months and GFR slope greater than the age-related normal; CKD stage 3 based on two or more consistent GFR estimates over at least 6 months
+ , achieved consensus in PREDICT-FD; ACR, albumin–creatinine ratio; cF, female patient(s) with classical disease; cM, male patient(s) with classical disease; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CKD-EPI, CKD-Epidemiology Collaboration; d, day; EFWG, European Fabry Working Group; eGFR, estimated GFR; F, female patient(s); FCGHSG, Fabry Center, General Hospital Slovenj Gradec; FD, Fabry disease; Gb3, globotriaosylceramide; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; M, male patient(s); mGFR, measured GFR; ncF, female patient(s) with non-classical disease; ncM, male patient(s) with non-classical disease; NA, not available; ULN, upper limit of normal
Cardiac signs: guideline stipulations and PREDICT-FD consensus [11]
| Early indicators of histological damage (heart biopsy) | Markers of early systolic/diastolic dysfunction | Elevated serum cardiac troponin | Early indicators of LVH | Late Gd+ on cMRI | Elevated serum NT-proBNP | Reduced myocardial T1 relaxation time on cMRI | Abnormal ECG | Abnormal echocardiogram | Abnormal wall motion on echocardiogram | Symptomatic cardiac disease | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PREDICT-FDa [ | + (NR) | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | – |
| EFWGb [ | – | – | – | Wall thickness > 12 mm with minimal/no fibrosis All, I | – | – | – | Rhythm disturbances All, I | – | – | – |
| Australia [ | All | Allc | – | Alld | Alld | – | Allc | Allc | Alld | – | – |
| Canadae [ | Confirmatory diagnosis | Grade 2 or 3 diastolic dysfunctionf | > 2 × ULN | Wall thickness: M, > 12 mm F, > 11 mm LVH Romhilt–Estes score > 5g | Left ventricular wall | > ULN | 1.5 T magnet M, < 901 ms F, 916 ms | Conduction/rhythm abnormalh | Diastolic filling abnormal Left atrium > 34 mL/m2 Moderate-to-severe mitral or aortic insufficiency Abnormal longitudinal strain gradient left ventricle | – | |
| Catalonia (Spain) | – | Alli | – | Alli,j | Allk | – | Allj | Allj | Alli | Alli | – |
| Francel [ | Fm | – | – | – | – | Fm | – | Fm | Fm | – | – |
| Portugal [ | – | – | LVH in adults Cardiomyopathy in children | Myocardial fibrosis | – | – | All, arrhythmia Adults, conduction disturbance | – | – | Dyspnea, palpitations, syncope, thoracic pain | |
| Slovenia (FCGHSG) | Confirmatory biopsy if needed in cF and in late-onset adultsn | Diastolic dysfunction | – | Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy | Signs of fibrosis | – | – | Signs of fibrosis by speckle tracing | |||
| Switzerlando | Fp | Fq | – | Fq | – | – | Fq | Fq | – | – | – |
| UKr [ | – | – | – | Wall thickness: M, > 13 mm F, > 12 mm | All | – | – | – | Alls | – | – |
Unpublished guidelines are summarized in Additional file 1: Table S1
aConsensus was reached that FD-specific treatment should be initiated at diagnosis in male patients aged 16 years or older who are asymptomatic for organ involvement, in boys younger than 16 years old with early indicators of organ involvement, and in all patients with guideline indicators of organ involvement
bRecommendations are based on class of evidence assigned: class I, treatment recommended or indicated; class IIA, treatment should be considered; class IIB, treatment may be considered; class III, treatment not recommended
cSignificant life-threatening arrhythmia or conduction defect
dLVH as evidenced by cMRI or echocardiogram data, in the absence of hypertension
eTreatment initiated based two criteria. Many cardiac manifestations may be attributable to hypertension, so this must be ruled out or treated for 12 months. One additional criterion not shown in the table: abnormal base–apex circumferential strain gradient on cMRI
fAmerican Society of Echocardiography and/or the presence of speckle tracking abnormalities
gAdditional criteria: LVM increase of 5 g/m2/y based on three measurements over at least 12 months; LVMI ≥ 20% above normal
hAtrioventricular block, short PR interval, left bundle branch block, ventricular or atrial tachyarrhythmias, sinus bradycardia in the absence of negative chronotropic drugs or other causes
iEchocardiographic changes: increased LVM, systolic or diastolic dysfunction, echocardiogram with persistently altered Doppler tissue
jElectrocardiographic changes; LVH; arrhythmia
kAlteration in cMRI suggestive of deposit
lAll male patients with a confirmed FD diagnosis should be offered ERT from age 18 years; ERT may be considered in children (6–18 years) with cardiac involvement
mTreatment should be offered to women who develop cardiomyopathy; guideline does not specify how cardiomyopathy should be diagnosed, so various methods of diagnosis have been included except cMRI
nAlso if necessary in asymptomatic boys with a classical mutation
oERT is practically always indicated in men, even those with mild symptoms and low organ involvement, and in patients undergoing hemodialysis or with a kidney transplant
pRelevant, histologically proven Gb3 deposits in kidney or heart biopsies
qManifest diastolic dysfunction, LVH, arrhythmias, attributable to cardiac involvement in FD
rFD-specific therapy should be considered in male patients with classical mutations at diagnosis; tabulated additional considerations apply to male and female patients with later-onset disease
sLVMI above normal for age and sex by 2D echocardiogram/cMRI
+ , achieved consensus in PREDICT-FD; 2D, two-dimensional; cF, female patient(s) with classical disease; cMRI, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging; ECG, electrocardiogram; EFWG, European Fabry Working Group; F, female patient(s); FCGHSG, Fabry Center, General Hospital Slovenj Gradec; FD, Fabry disease; Gb3, globotriaosylceramide; Gd+ , gadolinium enhancement; LVH, left ventricular hypertrophy; LVM, left ventricular mass; LVMI, LVM index; M, male patient(s); NR, achieved consensus but not recommended for safety reasons; NT-proBNP, N-terminal pro-natriuretic brain peptide; ULN, upper limit of normal; y, year
Neurological signs: guideline stipulations and PREDICT-FD consensus [11]
| White matter lesions | Neuropathic pain | Painful GI symptoms suggestive of neuropathy | Stroke/TIA | Sudden onset unilateral hearing loss | Acute ischemic optic neuropathy | Silent cerebral infarct on MRI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PREDICT-FDa [ | – | + | + | +b | No consensus | – | – |
| EFWGc [ | All, IIB | All, IIAd | – | All, IIA | All, IIBe | – | – |
| Australia [ | – | Allf | – | Allg | – | – | – |
| Canadah [ | –i | –j | – | All | All | All | – |
| Catalonia (Spain) | – | Allk | – | Alll | – | – | – |
| Francem [ | – | Childrenn | F, children | F,o childrenp | – | – | |
| Portugal [ | All adults | All | Abdominal pain in children | All adults | All adults | – | All adults |
| Slovenia (FCGHSG) | Allq | All | Allr | Allq | – | – | – |
| Switzerlands | – | Ft | F | Fu | – | – | – |
| UKv [ | – | Allw | Allw | – | – | – | – |
Unpublished guidelines are summarized in Additional file 1: Table S1
aConsensus was reached that FD-specific treatment should be initiated at diagnosis in male patients aged 16 years or older who are asymptomatic for organ involvement, in boys younger than 16 years old with early indicators of organ involvement, and in all patients with guideline indicators of organ involvement
bOriginally classified under “Other” [11]
cRecommendations are based on class of evidence assigned: class I, treatment recommended or indicated; class IIA, treatment should be considered; class IIB, treatment may be considered; class III, treatment not recommended
dIf neuropathic pain is controlled and does not interfere with activities of daily living, all classified as IIB
eAge-adjusted hearing loss
fUncontrolled chronic pain despite the use of maximum doses of appropriate analgesia and antiepileptic medications for peripheral neuropathy
gIschemic vascular disease
hTreatment initiated based on one criterion
iClinical significance of imaging abnormalities (white matter lesions, vessel dolichoectasia, cerebral microbleeds) alone is unclear and not an indication for ERT
jPain in isolation does not warrant ERT. A 12-month trial of ERT may be considered based on agreed outcomes (e.g. reduced need for analgesics, reduced school/work time lost, reduced hospital admission for pain crises)
kChronic pain, uncontrolled with drugs, that alters quality of life
lIschemic cardiopathy; imaged vascular ischemic lesions attributable to FD
mAll male patients with a confirmed FD diagnosis should be offered ERT from age 18 years
nMajor painful crises refractory to analgesic treatment with carbamazepine, diphenylhydantoin, gabapentin, amitryptiline in children aged 6–18 years
oSevere cochlear damage
pCochleo-vestibular involvement (hearing loss assessed by audiogram; vertigo of vestibular origin) in children aged 6–18 years
qCentral and/or autonomic nervous system involvement consistent with FD
rTreatment initiation in classical male patients and girls with abdominal pain and postprandial diarrhea; additional confirmation of disease progression required in adult cF and in both sexes with the late-onset phenotype
sERT is practically always indicated in men, even those with mild symptoms and low organ involvement, and in patients undergoing hemodialysis or after kidney transplantation
tTherapy-resistant pain
uCerebrovascular manifestations (insult, transient ischemic attack); dizziness
vFD-specific therapy should be considered in male patients with classical mutations at diagnosis; tabulated additional considerations apply to male and female patients with later-onset disease
wUncontrolled pain or GI symptoms requiring altered lifestyle or interfering with quality of life
+ , achieved consensus in PREDICT-FD; cF, female patient(s) with classical disease; EFWG, European Fabry Working Group; ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; F, female patient(s); FCGHSG, Fabry Center, General Hospital Slovenj Gradec; FD, Fabry disease; GI, gastrointestinal; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; TIA, transient ischemic attack
Patient-reported and other signs: guideline stipulations and PREDICT-FD consensus [11]
| Angiokeratoma | Organ biopsy | Non-pain GI symptoms | Sweating abnormalities or heat/exercise intolerance | Febrile crises | Patient-reported progression of symptoms/signs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PREDICT-FDa [ | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| EFWGb [ | Diagnostic sign | – | Aged < 16 years All, IIA Aged ≥ 16 years All, IIB | |||
| Australia [ | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Canada [ | Diagnostic sign | Diagnostic/prognostic | Allc | – | – | – |
| Catalonia (Spain) | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Franced [ | Diagnostic sign | – | – | – | – | – |
| Portugal [ | – | – | All, recurrent diarrhea attributable to FD | All | – | – |
| Slovenia (FCGHSG) | Diagnostic sign | Confirmatory skin biopsy if needed in asymptomatic boys with classical disease | Postprandial diarrheae | Alle | – | – |
| Switzerlandf | – | – | F | – | – | – |
| UKg [ | – | – | – | – | – | – |
Unpublished guidelines are summarized in Additional file 1: Table S1
aConsensus was reached that FD-specific treatment should be initiated at diagnosis in male patients aged 16 years or older who are asymptomatic for organ involvement, in boys younger than 16 years old with early indicators of organ involvement, and in all patients with guideline indicators of organ involvement
bRecommendations are based on class of evidence assigned: class I, treatment recommended or indicated; class IIA, treatment should be considered; class IIB, treatment may be considered; class III, treatment not recommended
cSignificant GI symptoms unresponsive to other measures for at least 6 months or associated with poor growth or significant reduction in quality of life
dAll male patients with a confirmed FD diagnosis should be offered ERT from age 18 years
eCentral and/or autonomic nervous system involvement consistent with FD
fERT is practically always indicated in men, even those with mild symptoms and low organ involvement, and in patients undergoing hemodialysis or with a kidney transplant
gFD-specific therapy should be considered in male patients with classical mutations at diagnosis; tabulated additional considerations apply to male and female patients with later-onset disease
+ , achieved consensus in PREDICT-FD; EFWG, European Fabry Working Group; ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; F, female patient(s); FCGHSG, Fabry Center, General Hospital Slovenj Gradec; FD, Fabry disease; GI, gastrointestinal; M, male patient(s)
Drivers and barriers associated with early treatment initiation in FD that achieved consensus in PREDICT-FD
Data in parentheses are the mean of agreement scores awarded by 21 panel members based on a 5-point pivoted Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree; 3 = neither agree nor disagree; 5 = strongly agree). The criterion for consensus was an agreement rating of at least 4 awarded by more than 67% of those who voted
Bold indicates the consensus statements describing the possible impact of PREDICT-FD
FD, Fabry disease; PREDICT-FD, PRoposing Early Disease Indicators for Clinical Tracking in Fabry Disease
Consensus statements describing the possible impact of PREDICT-FD
| Impact |
|---|
| 1. Findings from the initiative could help to |
| 2. Findings from the initiative could help to |
| 3. Findings from the initiative could lead to the |
| 4. Findings from the initiative could help to |
| 5. Findings from the initiative could help to |
| 6. Findings from the initiative could help to |
| 7. Findings from the initiative could help to |
| 8. Findings from the initiative could lead to the |
| 9. Findings from the initiative could lead to |
Data in parentheses are the mean of agreement scores awarded by 21 panel members based on a 5-point pivoted Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree; 3 = neither agree nor disagree; 5 = strongly agree). The criterion for consensus was an agreement rating of at least 4 awarded by more than 67% of those who voted
Bold indicates the consensus statements describing the possible impact of PREDICT-FD
FD, Fabry disease; HCP, healthcare professional; PREDICT-FD, PRoposing Early Disease Indicators for Clinical Tracking in Fabry Disease
Percentage of responding panel members (N = 6) who recommended that treatment should be initiated, based on evaluation of each case history against PREDICT-FD criteria, EFWG guidance, and their own country’s guidelines
| Case | PREDICT-FD | EFWG | Country | Case | PREDICT-FD | EFWG | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 (60) | 2 (50) | 3 (60) | 10 | 2 (50) | 1 (25) | 2 (40) |
| 2 | 4 (100) | 4 (100) | 4 (100) | 11 | 2 (67) | 2 (67) | 3 (75) |
| 3 | 3 (100) | 1 (33) | 1 (33) | 12 | 2 (67) | 3 (100) | 4 (100) |
| 4 | 3 (100) | 3 (100) | 3 (100) | 13 | 2 (100) | 2 (100) | 4 (100) |
| 5 | 2 (67) | 2 (67) | 2 (67) | 14 | 3 (100) | 3 (100) | 4 (100) |
| 6 | 3 (100) | 3 (100) | 4 (100) | 15 | 2 (100) | 2 (100) | 2 (67) |
| 7 | 2 (100) | 2 (100) | 3 (100) | 16 | 2 (100) | 2 (100) | 3 (100) |
| 8 | 1 (33) | 1 (33) | 1 (25) | 17 | 2 (100) | 2 (100) | 3 (100) |
| 9 | 1 (50) | 1 (50) | 2 (67) |
Data are n (%). Shaded rows indicate cases for which disease-specific therapy initiation was recommended unanimously, irrespective of which set of guidelines was used
EFWG, European Fabry Working Group; PREDICT-FD, PRoposing Early Disease Indicators for Clinical Tracking in Fabry Disease