k30 journal club 22 september 2009
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Agnes Chen, MDAssistant Professor of Pediatrics and Neurology
Harbor-UCLA Medical CenterDavid Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
Autosomal recessive Defective lysosomal enzyme is in the brain
and peripheral nerves: galactocerebrosidase
Normal labor, delivery, and early development
Median survival: 13 months after onset of symptoms due to rapid neurodegeneration
Failure to thrive, vegetative state, respiratory insufficiency and infections
Only one treatment available: hematopoetic stem cell transplantation
Stage 1: irritability, inconsolable crying, hypersensitivity to light and touch
Stage 2: regression of motor milestones with increasing tone, flexor posturing of arms, extensor posturing of legs, severe arching of back, abnl eye mvmts, loss of visual fixation with optic atrophy, seizures
Stage 3: decerebrate, deaf, blind, unable to eat
Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation only helps presymptomatic infants diagnosed at birth (known affected sibling or New York State newborn screening)
Intrathecal enzyme replacement is being developed
What are the outcome measures? What is the natural history of this disease? Is it ethical to do a clinical trial with a
control arm?
•Longitudinal observation•All cases in Sweden in 14 years•Mean age of onset 4 months•Earliest age of onset 1 month•Mean age of death 1.2 years•Observations are prior to use of tube feeding
How precise are the stages? What is the current natural history in the
era of modern supportive care?
•When is it too late to transplant?•How can we help general pediatricians diagnose these patients earlier?•Once the diagnosis is made, how can we help general pediatricians counsel families?•Looked at 42 Krabbe patients who were screened for transplant•A clinical staging system developed to categorize these patients•Then, examined relationship between posttransplant neurodevelopmental outcomes and pre-transplant stage•Major flaw in this study is the retrospective staging of patients
Neuropathology—brain biopsy Imaging--MRI Neurological exam—clinical parameters Cognitive and behavioral testing Biomarkers—CSF protein, enzyme level Neurophysiological measures—nerve
conduction velocity (NCV), brainstem auditory evoked response (BAER), visual evoked potentials (VEP), EEG
Linear correlations were calculated between stage of disease and baseline outcome measures
More of the patients in advanced stages had abnormal neurophysiological measures
However, lack of standardization and sensitivity make these poor outcome measures
%Stage 1 %Stage 2
%Stage 3 %Stage 4 Trend P
STAGE 1STAGE 2STAGE 3
Staging system can be validated if patients staged prospectively prior to transplant
Planning our own natural history study Natural history study will help determine
what are good endpoints Future treatment trial with intrathecal
enzyme replacement will use results of natural history study as control data
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