Browsing by Author "Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800)"
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Publication Assessment of intellectual impairment, health-related quality of life, and behavioral phenotype in patients with neurotransmitter related disorders: Data from the iNTD registry(2021) ;Keller, Mareike (57221906857) ;Brennenstuhl, Heiko (57205612982) ;Kuseyri Hübschmann, Oya (57216448362) ;Manti, Filippo (55206891700) ;Julia Palacios, Natalia Alexandra (57199695516) ;Friedman, Jennifer (7401865980) ;Yıldız, Yılmaz (54399559500) ;Koht, Jeanette Aimee (16177757700) ;Wong, Suet-Na (57226573515) ;Zafeiriou, Dimitrios I. (7004578105) ;López-Laso, Eduardo (55907154800) ;Pons, Roser (7006478182) ;Kulhánek, Jan (56830300900) ;Jeltsch, Kathrin (57191594343) ;Serrano-Lomelin, Jesus (57188661903) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;Opladen, Thomas (23486297300) ;Goez, Helly (16642830800) ;Burlina, Alberto (57207102691) ;Cortès-Saladelafont, Elisenda (36191788500) ;Fernández Ramos, Joaquín Alejandro (26767726100) ;García-Cazorla, Angeles (35512818300) ;Hoffmann, Georg F. (57226229787) ;Kiat Hong, Stacey Tay (57226569914) ;Honzík, Tomáš (57203614904) ;Kavecan, Ivana (24923439200) ;Kurian, Manju A. (57200642212) ;Leuzzi, Vincenzo (7003575065) ;Lücke, Thomas (7004154235) ;Manzoni, Francesca (55860500300) ;Mastrangelo, Mario (7004994434) ;Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet (57202771387) ;Mir, Pablo (14060780400) ;Oppebøen, Mari (57204812106) ;Pearson, Toni S. (36497390000) ;Sivri, H. Serap (57189010942) ;Steel, Dora (57195757688) ;Stevanović, Galina (57212303660)Fung, Cheuk-Wing (7102443761)Inherited disorders of neurotransmitter metabolism are a group of rare diseases, which are caused by impaired synthesis, transport, or degradation of neurotransmitters or cofactors and result in various degrees of delayed or impaired psychomotor development. To assess the effect of neurotransmitter deficiencies on intelligence, quality of life, and behavior, the data of 148 patients in the registry of the International Working Group on Neurotransmitter Related Disorders (iNTD) was evaluated using results from standardized age-adjusted tests and questionnaires. Patients with a primary disorder of monoamine metabolism had lower IQ scores (mean IQ 58, range 40-100) within the range of cognitive impairment (<70) compared to patients with a BH4 deficiency (mean IQ 84, range 40-129). Short attention span and distractibility were most frequently mentioned by parents, while patients reported most frequently anxiety and distractibility when asked for behavioral traits. In individuals with succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency, self-stimulatory behaviors were commonly reported by parents, whereas in patients with dopamine transporter deficiency, DNAJC12 deficiency, and monoamine oxidase A deficiency, self-injurious or mutilating behaviors have commonly been observed. Phobic fears were increased in patients with 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase deficiency, while individuals with sepiapterin reductase deficiency frequently experienced communication and sleep difficulties. Patients with BH4 deficiencies achieved significantly higher quality of life as compared to other groups. This analysis of the iNTD registry data highlights: (a) difference in IQ and subdomains of quality of life between BH4 deficiencies and primary neurotransmitter-related disorders and (b) previously underreported behavioral traits. © 2021 The Authors. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Assessment of intellectual impairment, health-related quality of life, and behavioral phenotype in patients with neurotransmitter related disorders: Data from the iNTD registry(2021) ;Keller, Mareike (57221906857) ;Brennenstuhl, Heiko (57205612982) ;Kuseyri Hübschmann, Oya (57216448362) ;Manti, Filippo (55206891700) ;Julia Palacios, Natalia Alexandra (57199695516) ;Friedman, Jennifer (7401865980) ;Yıldız, Yılmaz (54399559500) ;Koht, Jeanette Aimee (16177757700) ;Wong, Suet-Na (57226573515) ;Zafeiriou, Dimitrios I. (7004578105) ;López-Laso, Eduardo (55907154800) ;Pons, Roser (7006478182) ;Kulhánek, Jan (56830300900) ;Jeltsch, Kathrin (57191594343) ;Serrano-Lomelin, Jesus (57188661903) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;Opladen, Thomas (23486297300) ;Goez, Helly (16642830800) ;Burlina, Alberto (57207102691) ;Cortès-Saladelafont, Elisenda (36191788500) ;Fernández Ramos, Joaquín Alejandro (26767726100) ;García-Cazorla, Angeles (35512818300) ;Hoffmann, Georg F. (57226229787) ;Kiat Hong, Stacey Tay (57226569914) ;Honzík, Tomáš (57203614904) ;Kavecan, Ivana (24923439200) ;Kurian, Manju A. (57200642212) ;Leuzzi, Vincenzo (7003575065) ;Lücke, Thomas (7004154235) ;Manzoni, Francesca (55860500300) ;Mastrangelo, Mario (7004994434) ;Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet (57202771387) ;Mir, Pablo (14060780400) ;Oppebøen, Mari (57204812106) ;Pearson, Toni S. (36497390000) ;Sivri, H. Serap (57189010942) ;Steel, Dora (57195757688) ;Stevanović, Galina (57212303660)Fung, Cheuk-Wing (7102443761)Inherited disorders of neurotransmitter metabolism are a group of rare diseases, which are caused by impaired synthesis, transport, or degradation of neurotransmitters or cofactors and result in various degrees of delayed or impaired psychomotor development. To assess the effect of neurotransmitter deficiencies on intelligence, quality of life, and behavior, the data of 148 patients in the registry of the International Working Group on Neurotransmitter Related Disorders (iNTD) was evaluated using results from standardized age-adjusted tests and questionnaires. Patients with a primary disorder of monoamine metabolism had lower IQ scores (mean IQ 58, range 40-100) within the range of cognitive impairment (<70) compared to patients with a BH4 deficiency (mean IQ 84, range 40-129). Short attention span and distractibility were most frequently mentioned by parents, while patients reported most frequently anxiety and distractibility when asked for behavioral traits. In individuals with succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency, self-stimulatory behaviors were commonly reported by parents, whereas in patients with dopamine transporter deficiency, DNAJC12 deficiency, and monoamine oxidase A deficiency, self-injurious or mutilating behaviors have commonly been observed. Phobic fears were increased in patients with 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase deficiency, while individuals with sepiapterin reductase deficiency frequently experienced communication and sleep difficulties. Patients with BH4 deficiencies achieved significantly higher quality of life as compared to other groups. This analysis of the iNTD registry data highlights: (a) difference in IQ and subdomains of quality of life between BH4 deficiencies and primary neurotransmitter-related disorders and (b) previously underreported behavioral traits. © 2021 The Authors. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Severity-adjusted evaluation of liver transplantation on health outcomes in urea cycle disorders(2024) ;Posset, Roland (56532011000) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;Gleich, Florian (56155847800) ;Scharre, Svenja (57220876114) ;Okun, Jürgen G. (7004151544) ;Gropman, Andrea L. (6701643851) ;Nagamani, Sandesh C.S. (57217000095) ;Druck, Ann-Catrin (57920666800) ;Epp, Friederike (58836434800) ;Hoffmann, Georg F. (57226229787) ;Kölker, Stefan (7004458958) ;Zielonka, Matthias (36497855800) ;Mew, Nicholas Ah (57647387500) ;Seminara, Jennifer (36244493000) ;Burrage, Lindsay C. (6701376277) ;Berry, Gerard T. (55246260500) ;Breilyn, Margo (57209099781) ;Schulze, Andreas (57203234786) ;Harding, Cary O. (7102457553) ;Berry, Susan A. (7201836853) ;Wong, Derek (56015984300) ;McCandless, Shawn E. (7003467422) ;Baumgartner, Matthias R. (7101704024) ;Konczal, Laura (35069767800) ;Ficicioglu, Can (8219490500) ;Diaz, George A. (7201671437) ;Coughlin, Curtis R. (57203153211) ;Enns, Gregory M. (6602187309) ;Gallagher, Renata C. (55828714600) ;Lam, Christina (37111100200) ;Stricker, Tamar (55917404200) ;Wilkening, Greta (7003558398) ;Dionisi-Vici, Carlo (7006329633) ;Dobbelaere, Dries (7005945963) ;Blasco-Alonso, Javier (57210776027) ;Burlina, Alberto B. (57207102691) ;Freisinger, Peter (6603884553) ;van Hasselt, Peter M. (7003849198) ;Skouma, Anastasia (57207717934) ;Lund, Allan M. (57202189512) ;Vara, Roshni (57208699708) ;Sarajlija, Adrijan (26027638400) ;Morris, Andrew A. (7403404366) ;Chakrapani, Anupam (57205589935) ;Barić, Ivo (55197502200) ;Augoustides-Savvopoulou, Persephone (6506211042) ;Chien, Yin-Hsiu (7201918882) ;Cortès-Saladelafont, Elisenda (36191788500) ;Eyskens, Francois (6603373921) ;Gramer, Gwendolyn (21233745000) ;Zeman, Jiri (57197063698) ;Karall, Daniela (15822540900) ;Couce, Maria L. (7003683107) ;Mühlhausen, Chris (16837114500) ;Pedrón-Giner, Consuelo (56108939500) ;Spiekerkoetter, Ute (6603450391) ;Sykut-Cegielska, Jolanta (57204641427) ;Wagenmakers, Margreet (26021602500)Wijburg, Frits A. (7003454408)Purpose: Liver transplantation (LTx) is performed in individuals with urea cycle disorders when medical management (MM) insufficiently prevents the occurrence of hyperammonemic events. However, there is a paucity of systematic analyses on the effects of LTx on health-related outcome parameters compared to individuals with comparable severity who are medically managed. Methods: We investigated the effects of LTx and MM on validated health-related outcome parameters, including the metabolic disease course, linear growth, and neurocognitive outcomes. Individuals were stratified into “severe” and “attenuated” categories based on the genotype-specific and validated in vitro enzyme activity. Results: LTx enabled metabolic stability by prevention of further hyperammonemic events after transplantation and was associated with a more favorable growth outcome compared with individuals remaining under MM. However, neurocognitive outcome in individuals with LTx did not differ from the medically managed counterparts as reflected by the frequency of motor abnormality and cognitive standard deviation score at last observation. Conclusion: Whereas LTx enabled metabolic stability without further need of protein restriction or nitrogen-scavenging therapy and was associated with a more favorable growth outcome, LTx—as currently performed—was not associated with improved neurocognitive outcomes compared with long-term MM in the investigated urea cycle disorders. © 2023 The Authors - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The continuously evolving phenotype of succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency(2024) ;Julia-Palacios, Natalia Alexandra (57199695516) ;Kuseyri Hübschmann, Oya (57216448362) ;Olivella, Mireia (36017143100) ;Pons, Roser (7006478182) ;Horvath, Gabriella (35897098200) ;Lücke, Thomas (7004154235) ;Fung, Cheuk-Wing (7102443761) ;Wong, Suet-Na (57226573515) ;Cortès-Saladelafont, Elisenda (36191788500) ;Rovira-Remisa, M. Mar (57219204734) ;Yıldız, Yılmaz (54399559500) ;Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet (57202771387) ;Assmann, Birgit (7004587883) ;Stevanović, Galina (57212303660) ;Manti, Filippo (55206891700) ;Brennenstuhl, Heiko (57205612982) ;Jung-Klawitter, Sabine (57189235209) ;Jeltsch, Kathrin (57191594343) ;Sivri, H. Serap (57189010942) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;García-Cazorla, Àngels (35512818300)Opladen, Thomas (23486297300)The objective of the study is to evaluate the evolving phenotype and genetic spectrum of patients with succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency (SSADHD) in long-term follow-up. Longitudinal clinical and biochemical data of 22 pediatric and 9 adult individuals with SSADHD from the patient registry of the International Working Group on Neurotransmitter related Disorders (iNTD) were studied with in silico analyses, pathogenicity scores and molecular modeling of ALDH5A1 variants. Leading initial symptoms, with onset in infancy, were developmental delay and hypotonia. Year of birth and specific initial symptoms influenced the diagnostic delay. Clinical phenotype of 26 individuals (median 12 years, range 1.8–33.4 years) showed a diversifying course in follow-up: 77% behavioral problems, 76% coordination problems, 73% speech disorders, 58% epileptic seizures and 40% movement disorders. After ataxia, dystonia (19%), chorea (11%) and hypokinesia (15%) were the most frequent movement disorders. Involvement of the dentate nucleus in brain imaging was observed together with movement disorders or coordination problems. Short attention span (78.6%) and distractibility (71.4%) were the most frequently behavior traits mentioned by parents while impulsiveness, problems communicating wishes or needs and compulsive behavior were addressed as strongly interfering with family life. Treatment was mainly aimed to control epileptic seizures and psychiatric symptoms. Four new pathogenic variants were identified. In silico scoring system, protein activity and pathogenicity score revealed a high correlation. A genotype/phenotype correlation was not observed, even in siblings. This study presents the diversifying characteristics of disease phenotype during the disease course, highlighting movement disorders, widens the knowledge on the genotypic spectrum of SSADHD and emphasizes a reliable application of in silico approaches. © 2024 The Authors. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The continuously evolving phenotype of succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency(2024) ;Julia-Palacios, Natalia Alexandra (57199695516) ;Kuseyri Hübschmann, Oya (57216448362) ;Olivella, Mireia (36017143100) ;Pons, Roser (7006478182) ;Horvath, Gabriella (35897098200) ;Lücke, Thomas (7004154235) ;Fung, Cheuk-Wing (7102443761) ;Wong, Suet-Na (57226573515) ;Cortès-Saladelafont, Elisenda (36191788500) ;Rovira-Remisa, M. Mar (57219204734) ;Yıldız, Yılmaz (54399559500) ;Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet (57202771387) ;Assmann, Birgit (7004587883) ;Stevanović, Galina (57212303660) ;Manti, Filippo (55206891700) ;Brennenstuhl, Heiko (57205612982) ;Jung-Klawitter, Sabine (57189235209) ;Jeltsch, Kathrin (57191594343) ;Sivri, H. Serap (57189010942) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;García-Cazorla, Àngels (35512818300)Opladen, Thomas (23486297300)The objective of the study is to evaluate the evolving phenotype and genetic spectrum of patients with succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase deficiency (SSADHD) in long-term follow-up. Longitudinal clinical and biochemical data of 22 pediatric and 9 adult individuals with SSADHD from the patient registry of the International Working Group on Neurotransmitter related Disorders (iNTD) were studied with in silico analyses, pathogenicity scores and molecular modeling of ALDH5A1 variants. Leading initial symptoms, with onset in infancy, were developmental delay and hypotonia. Year of birth and specific initial symptoms influenced the diagnostic delay. Clinical phenotype of 26 individuals (median 12 years, range 1.8–33.4 years) showed a diversifying course in follow-up: 77% behavioral problems, 76% coordination problems, 73% speech disorders, 58% epileptic seizures and 40% movement disorders. After ataxia, dystonia (19%), chorea (11%) and hypokinesia (15%) were the most frequent movement disorders. Involvement of the dentate nucleus in brain imaging was observed together with movement disorders or coordination problems. Short attention span (78.6%) and distractibility (71.4%) were the most frequently behavior traits mentioned by parents while impulsiveness, problems communicating wishes or needs and compulsive behavior were addressed as strongly interfering with family life. Treatment was mainly aimed to control epileptic seizures and psychiatric symptoms. Four new pathogenic variants were identified. In silico scoring system, protein activity and pathogenicity score revealed a high correlation. A genotype/phenotype correlation was not observed, even in siblings. This study presents the diversifying characteristics of disease phenotype during the disease course, highlighting movement disorders, widens the knowledge on the genotypic spectrum of SSADHD and emphasizes a reliable application of in silico approaches. © 2024 The Authors. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Transatlantic combined and comparative data analysis of 1095 patients with urea cycle disorders—A successful strategy for clinical research of rare diseases(2019) ;Posset, Roland (56532011000) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;Boy, Nikolas (19639973700) ;Burlina, Alberto B. (57207102691) ;Dionisi-Vici, Carlo (7006329633) ;Dobbelaere, Dries (7005945963) ;Garcia-Cazorla, Angeles (35512818300) ;de Lonlay, Pascale (7004636338) ;Teles, Elisa Leão (23100512300) ;Vara, Roshni (57208699708) ;Mew, Nicholas Ah (6505711502) ;Batshaw, Mark L. (7006640060) ;Baumgartner, Matthias R. (7101704024) ;McCandless, Shawn E. (7003467422) ;Seminara, Jennifer (36244493000) ;Summar, Marshall (56827820700) ;Hoffmann, Georg F. (57226229787) ;Kölker, Stefan (7004458958) ;Burgard, Peter (6603827252) ;Berry, Susan A. (7201836853) ;Burrage, Lindsay (6701376277) ;Coughlin, Curtis (57203153211) ;Diaz, George A. (7201671437) ;Gallagher, Renata C. (55828714600) ;Gropman, Andrea (6701643851) ;Harding, Cary O. (7102457553) ;Lee, Brendan (8756068700) ;Le Mons, Cynthia (55831403700) ;Lawrence Merritt, J. (57193239209) ;Nagamani, Sandesh C. S. (57217000095) ;Schulze, Andreas (57203234786) ;Stricker, Tamar (55917404200) ;Tuchman, Mendel (7006662780) ;Waisbren, Susan (7005789740) ;WeisfeldAdams, James (57207933158) ;Wong, Derek (56015984300) ;Yudkoff, Marc (7005455285) ;Arnoux, JeanBaptiste (23059548100) ;Bari&cacute ;, Ivo (55197502200) ;Bosch, Annet M. (7101700305) ;Chabrol, Brigitte (7006531746) ;Chakrapani, Anupam (57205589935) ;CortèsSaladefont, Elisenda (57207933538) ;Couce, Maria L. (7003683107) ;Eyskens, Francois (6603373921) ;de Laet, Corine (8523444700) ;de Meirleir, Linda (7003741746) ;Freisinger, Peter (6603884553) ;Gleich, Florian (56155847800) ;Grünewald, Stephanie (7005299518) ;Häberle, Johannes (7003808409) ;Hwu, WuhLiang (7101988431) ;Jalan, Anil (6603103813) ;Karall, Daniela (15822540900) ;Lindner, Martin (7102871113) ;Lund, Allan M. (57202189512) ;Martinelli, Diego (36163327600) ;Murphy, Elaine (56497461300) ;Mühlhausen, Chris (16837114500) ;Olivieri, Giorgia (57201210820) ;Ottolenghi, Chris (7005986708) ;Rodrigues, Esmeralda (7102572626) ;Rubert, Laura (23493757400) ;Sarajlija, Adrijan (26027638400) ;Schiff, Manuel (7102067308) ;Sokal, Etienne (35380002300) ;SykutCegielska, Jolanta (57207933084) ;Walter, John H. (35461752100) ;Williams, Monique (57200399540)Zeman, Jiri (57197063698)Background: To improve our understanding of urea cycle disorders (UCDs) prospectively followed by two North American (NA) and European (EU) patient cohorts. Aims: Description of the NA and EU patient samples and investigation of the prospects of combined and comparative analyses for individuals with UCDs. Methods: Retrieval and comparison of the data from 1095 individuals (NA: 620, EU: 475) from two electronic databases. Results: The proportion of females with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (fOTC-D), particularly those being asymptomatic (asfOTC-D), was higher in the NA than in the EU sample. Exclusion of asfOTC-D resulted in similar distributions in both samples. The mean age at first symptoms was higher in NA than in EU patients with late onset (LO), but similar for those with early (≤ 28 days) onset (EO) of symptoms. Also, the mean age at diagnosis and diagnostic delay for EO and LO patients were similar in the NA and EU cohorts. In most patients (including fOTC-D), diagnosis was made after the onset of symptoms (59.9%) or by high-risk family screening (24.7%), and less often by newborn screening (8.9%) and prenatal testing (3.7%). Analysis of clinical phenotypes revealed that EO patients presented with more symptoms than LO individuals, but that numbers of symptoms correlated with plasma ammonium concentrations in EO patients only. Liver transplantation was reported for 90 NA and 25 EU patients. Conclusions: Combined analysis of databases drawn from distinct populations opens the possibility to increase sample sizes for natural history questions, while comparative analysis utilizing differences in approach to treatment can evaluate therapeutic options and enhance long-term outcome studies. © 2018 SSIEM - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Transatlantic combined and comparative data analysis of 1095 patients with urea cycle disorders—A successful strategy for clinical research of rare diseases(2019) ;Posset, Roland (56532011000) ;Garbade, Sven F. (13614132800) ;Boy, Nikolas (19639973700) ;Burlina, Alberto B. (57207102691) ;Dionisi-Vici, Carlo (7006329633) ;Dobbelaere, Dries (7005945963) ;Garcia-Cazorla, Angeles (35512818300) ;de Lonlay, Pascale (7004636338) ;Teles, Elisa Leão (23100512300) ;Vara, Roshni (57208699708) ;Mew, Nicholas Ah (6505711502) ;Batshaw, Mark L. (7006640060) ;Baumgartner, Matthias R. (7101704024) ;McCandless, Shawn E. (7003467422) ;Seminara, Jennifer (36244493000) ;Summar, Marshall (56827820700) ;Hoffmann, Georg F. (57226229787) ;Kölker, Stefan (7004458958) ;Burgard, Peter (6603827252) ;Berry, Susan A. (7201836853) ;Burrage, Lindsay (6701376277) ;Coughlin, Curtis (57203153211) ;Diaz, George A. (7201671437) ;Gallagher, Renata C. (55828714600) ;Gropman, Andrea (6701643851) ;Harding, Cary O. (7102457553) ;Lee, Brendan (8756068700) ;Le Mons, Cynthia (55831403700) ;Lawrence Merritt, J. (57193239209) ;Nagamani, Sandesh C. S. (57217000095) ;Schulze, Andreas (57203234786) ;Stricker, Tamar (55917404200) ;Tuchman, Mendel (7006662780) ;Waisbren, Susan (7005789740) ;WeisfeldAdams, James (57207933158) ;Wong, Derek (56015984300) ;Yudkoff, Marc (7005455285) ;Arnoux, JeanBaptiste (23059548100) ;Bari&cacute ;, Ivo (55197502200) ;Bosch, Annet M. (7101700305) ;Chabrol, Brigitte (7006531746) ;Chakrapani, Anupam (57205589935) ;CortèsSaladefont, Elisenda (57207933538) ;Couce, Maria L. (7003683107) ;Eyskens, Francois (6603373921) ;de Laet, Corine (8523444700) ;de Meirleir, Linda (7003741746) ;Freisinger, Peter (6603884553) ;Gleich, Florian (56155847800) ;Grünewald, Stephanie (7005299518) ;Häberle, Johannes (7003808409) ;Hwu, WuhLiang (7101988431) ;Jalan, Anil (6603103813) ;Karall, Daniela (15822540900) ;Lindner, Martin (7102871113) ;Lund, Allan M. (57202189512) ;Martinelli, Diego (36163327600) ;Murphy, Elaine (56497461300) ;Mühlhausen, Chris (16837114500) ;Olivieri, Giorgia (57201210820) ;Ottolenghi, Chris (7005986708) ;Rodrigues, Esmeralda (7102572626) ;Rubert, Laura (23493757400) ;Sarajlija, Adrijan (26027638400) ;Schiff, Manuel (7102067308) ;Sokal, Etienne (35380002300) ;SykutCegielska, Jolanta (57207933084) ;Walter, John H. (35461752100) ;Williams, Monique (57200399540)Zeman, Jiri (57197063698)Background: To improve our understanding of urea cycle disorders (UCDs) prospectively followed by two North American (NA) and European (EU) patient cohorts. Aims: Description of the NA and EU patient samples and investigation of the prospects of combined and comparative analyses for individuals with UCDs. Methods: Retrieval and comparison of the data from 1095 individuals (NA: 620, EU: 475) from two electronic databases. Results: The proportion of females with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (fOTC-D), particularly those being asymptomatic (asfOTC-D), was higher in the NA than in the EU sample. Exclusion of asfOTC-D resulted in similar distributions in both samples. The mean age at first symptoms was higher in NA than in EU patients with late onset (LO), but similar for those with early (≤ 28 days) onset (EO) of symptoms. Also, the mean age at diagnosis and diagnostic delay for EO and LO patients were similar in the NA and EU cohorts. In most patients (including fOTC-D), diagnosis was made after the onset of symptoms (59.9%) or by high-risk family screening (24.7%), and less often by newborn screening (8.9%) and prenatal testing (3.7%). Analysis of clinical phenotypes revealed that EO patients presented with more symptoms than LO individuals, but that numbers of symptoms correlated with plasma ammonium concentrations in EO patients only. Liver transplantation was reported for 90 NA and 25 EU patients. Conclusions: Combined analysis of databases drawn from distinct populations opens the possibility to increase sample sizes for natural history questions, while comparative analysis utilizing differences in approach to treatment can evaluate therapeutic options and enhance long-term outcome studies. © 2018 SSIEM
