Epidemiology of Fabry disease in patients in hemodialysis in the Madrid community


Abstract:

This study screened for Fabry disease (FD) in patients in hemodialysis (HD) in the region of Madrid (CAM) with a cross-sectional design to evaluate HD-prevalent patients, followed by a three-year period prospective design to analyze HD-incident patients. Inclusion criteria: patients older than 18 years on HD in the CAM, excluding patients diagnosed with any other hebkp_reditary disease with renal involvement different from FD, that sign the Informed Consent (IC). Exclusion criteria: underaged patients or not agreeing or not being capable of signing the IC. Results: 3470 patients were included, 63% males and with an average age of 67.9 ± 9.7 years. 2357 were HD-prevalent patients and 1113 HD-incident patients. For HD-prevalent patients, average time in HD was 45.2 months (SD 51.3), in HD-incident patients proteinuria was present in 28.4%. There were no statistical differences in plasmatic alpha-galactosidase A (α-GAL-A) activity or Lyso-GL-3 values when comparing HD-prevalent and HD-incident populations and neither between males and females. A genetic study was performed in 87 patients (2.5% of patients): 60 male patients with decreased enzymatic activity and 27 female patients either with a decreased GLA activity, increased Lyso-Gl3 levels or both. The genetic variants identified were: p.Asp313Tyr (4 patients), p.Arg220Gln (3 patients) and M290I (1 patient). None of the identified variants is pathogenic. Conclusions: 76% of HD Centers of the CAM participated in the study. This is the first publication to describe the prevalence of FD in the HD-population of a region of Spain as well as its average α-GAL-A-activity and plasmatic Lyso-Gl3 levels. It is also the first study that combines a cross-sectional design with a prospective follow-up design. This study has not identified any FD patient.

Año de publicación:

2022

Keywords:

  • spain
  • Lyso-Gl3
  • Fabry disease
  • MADRID
  • screening
  • hemodialysis

Fuente:

scopusscopus