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Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease

The introduction of disease-specific therapy for patients with type I Gaucher disease (GD1) was a revolution in the management of patients, but not without cost. Thus, the management of mildly affected patients is still debated. We herein report a long-term follow-up (median (range) of 20 (5–58) yea...

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Autores principales: Dinur, Tama, Zimran, Ari, Becker-Cohen, Michal, Arkadir, David, Cozma, Claudia, Hovakimyan, Marina, Oppermann, Sebastian, Demuth, Laura, Rolfs, Arndt, Revel-Vilk, Shoshana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6832634/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31614613
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8101662
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author Dinur, Tama
Zimran, Ari
Becker-Cohen, Michal
Arkadir, David
Cozma, Claudia
Hovakimyan, Marina
Oppermann, Sebastian
Demuth, Laura
Rolfs, Arndt
Revel-Vilk, Shoshana
author_facet Dinur, Tama
Zimran, Ari
Becker-Cohen, Michal
Arkadir, David
Cozma, Claudia
Hovakimyan, Marina
Oppermann, Sebastian
Demuth, Laura
Rolfs, Arndt
Revel-Vilk, Shoshana
author_sort Dinur, Tama
collection PubMed
description The introduction of disease-specific therapy for patients with type I Gaucher disease (GD1) was a revolution in the management of patients, but not without cost. Thus, the management of mildly affected patients is still debated. We herein report a long-term follow-up (median (range) of 20 (5–58) years) of 103 GD1 patients who have never received enzymatic or substrate reduction therapy. The median (range) platelet count and hemoglobin levels in last assessment of all but six patients who refused therapy (although recommended and approved) were 152 (56–408) × 10(3)/mL and 13.1 (7.6–16.8) g/dL, respectively. Most patients had mild hepatosplenomegaly. Nine patients were splenectomized. No patient developed clinical bone disease. The median (range) lyso-Gb1 levels at last visit was 108.5 (8.1–711) ng/mL; lowest for patients with R496H/other and highest for patients refusing therapy. This rather large cohort with long follow-up confirms that mildly affected patients may remain stable for many years without GD-specific therapy. The challenge for the future, when newborn screening may detect all patients, is to be able to predict which of the early diagnosed patients is at risk for disease-related complications and therefore for early treatment, and who may remain asymptomatic or minimally affected with no need for disease-specific therapy.
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spelling pubmed-68326342019-11-25 Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease Dinur, Tama Zimran, Ari Becker-Cohen, Michal Arkadir, David Cozma, Claudia Hovakimyan, Marina Oppermann, Sebastian Demuth, Laura Rolfs, Arndt Revel-Vilk, Shoshana J Clin Med Article The introduction of disease-specific therapy for patients with type I Gaucher disease (GD1) was a revolution in the management of patients, but not without cost. Thus, the management of mildly affected patients is still debated. We herein report a long-term follow-up (median (range) of 20 (5–58) years) of 103 GD1 patients who have never received enzymatic or substrate reduction therapy. The median (range) platelet count and hemoglobin levels in last assessment of all but six patients who refused therapy (although recommended and approved) were 152 (56–408) × 10(3)/mL and 13.1 (7.6–16.8) g/dL, respectively. Most patients had mild hepatosplenomegaly. Nine patients were splenectomized. No patient developed clinical bone disease. The median (range) lyso-Gb1 levels at last visit was 108.5 (8.1–711) ng/mL; lowest for patients with R496H/other and highest for patients refusing therapy. This rather large cohort with long follow-up confirms that mildly affected patients may remain stable for many years without GD-specific therapy. The challenge for the future, when newborn screening may detect all patients, is to be able to predict which of the early diagnosed patients is at risk for disease-related complications and therefore for early treatment, and who may remain asymptomatic or minimally affected with no need for disease-specific therapy. MDPI 2019-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6832634/ /pubmed/31614613 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8101662 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dinur, Tama
Zimran, Ari
Becker-Cohen, Michal
Arkadir, David
Cozma, Claudia
Hovakimyan, Marina
Oppermann, Sebastian
Demuth, Laura
Rolfs, Arndt
Revel-Vilk, Shoshana
Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease
title Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease
title_full Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease
title_fullStr Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease
title_full_unstemmed Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease
title_short Long Term Follow-Up of 103 Untreated Adult Patients with Type 1 Gaucher Disease
title_sort long term follow-up of 103 untreated adult patients with type 1 gaucher disease
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6832634/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31614613
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm8101662
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