9 research outputs found

    Healthcare Access, Satisfaction, and Healthā€‘Related Quality of Life Among Children and Adults with Rare Diseases

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    Background: Research in a variety of countries indicates that healthcare access and health-related quality of life are challenged among people with a variety of rare diseases (RDs). However, there has been little systematic research on the experiences of children and adults with RDs in the American healthcare system that identifies commonalities across RDs. This research aimed to: (1) Describe demographics, disease characteristics, diagnostic experiences, access to healthcare, knowledge about RDs, support from healthcare professionals, and patient satisfaction among people with RDs and their caregivers; (2) examine predictors of patient satisfaction among adults with RDs; (3) compare health-related quality of life and stigma to US population norms; 4) examine predictors of anxiety and depression among adults and children with RDs. Results: This large-scale survey included (n = 1128) adults with RD or parents or caregivers of children with RDs representing 344 different RDs. About one third of participants waited four or more years for a diagnosis and misdiagnosis was common. A subset of participants reported experiencing insurance-related delays or denials for tests, treatments, specialists, or services. Approximately half of participants felt their medical and social support was sufficient, yet less than a third had sufficient dental and psychological support. Patients were generally neither satisfied or dissatisfied with their healthcare providers. Major predictors of satisfaction were lower stigma, lower anxiety, shorter diagnostic odyssey, greater physical function, and less pain interference. Adults and children with RDs had significantly poorer health-related quality of life and stigma in all domains compared to US norms. Predictors of both anxiety and depression were greater stigma/poor peer relationships, fatigue, sleep disturbance, limited ability to participate in social roles, and unstable disease course. Conclusions: People in the U.S. with RDs have poor health-related quality of life and high stigma. These factors arerelated to patient satisfaction and healthcare access, including diagnostic delays and misdiagnosis. Advocacy work is needed in order to improve healthcare access and ultimately health-related quality of life for children and adults with RDs

    FRD-2023-0011 - presentation - Recommendations for managing diarrhea from trofinetide use in individuals with Rett syndrome: a plain language summary

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    What is this summary about?Rett syndrome is a rare genetic disorder that affects the way the brain develops. The medication trofinetide (DAYBUEā„¢) was studied in a large clinical trial called LAVENDER, where it showed a benefit in reducing symptoms of Rett syndrome versus placebo (placebo did not contain medication but looked the same as trofinetide and was taken in the same way). The most common side effect in the trial was diarrhea (frequent and/or watery bowel movements). In order to help caregivers and healthcare providers, experts created recommendations on how to prevent and manage diarrhea if it occurs during trofinetide treatment.What were the results?In the LAVENDER trial, no characteristics were found that could help to identify people who may develop diarrhea when taking trofinetide.What were the recommendations?The diarrhea management recommendations include:Keep a diary of the frequency (how often) of bowel movements and their consistency (shape, hardness/softness) before starting trofinetideOn starting trofinetide, discuss stopping or reducing medicines for constipation with the healthcare providerā€“ Ask the healthcare provider to swap other liquid medications with sugar alcohols to a pill form if possibleā€“ Introduce dietary fiberAt the first sign of diarrhea, contact the healthcare provider and start antidiarrheal medicationā€“ A stool (feces) diary should be kept, noting frequency and consistency along with monitoring how much liquid the person is drinkingFollow a regular diet when taking trofinetideā€“ Those with mild dehydration can be given an oral rehydration solution, but the healthcare provider should be contacted for moderate or severe dehydrationWhat do the results mean?These practical recommendations may help caregivers to manage diarrhea so people can continue to take trofinetide, allowing individuals with Rett syndrome and their caregivers to experience its benefits.</p

    Improving Treatment Trial Outcomes for Rett Syndrome: The Development of Rett-specific Anchors for the Clinical Global Impression Scale.

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    Rett syndrome is a genetically based neurodevelopmental disorder. Although the clinical consequences of Rett syndrome are profound and lifelong, currently no approved drug treatments are available specifically targeted to Rett symptoms. High quality outcome measures, specific to the core symptoms of a disorder are a critical component of well-designed clinical trials for individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders. The Clinical Global Impression Scale is a measure of global clinical change with strong face validity that has been widely used as an outcome measure in clinical trials of central nervous system disorders. Despite its favorable assay sensitivity in clinical trials, as a global measure, the Clinical Global Impression Scale is not specific to the signs and symptoms of the disorder under study. Development of key anchors for the scale, specific to the disorder being assessed, holds promise for enhancing the validity and reliability of the measure for disorders such as Rett syndrome

    Evidence of altered salivary cytokine concentrations in Rett syndrome and associations with clinical severity

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    Background: Immune dysregulation may play a role in the development of Rett syndrome (RTT), a neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations of the MECP2 gene. Abnormal cytokine concentrations have been documented in the serum of individuals with RTT. Measurement of salivary cytokines has been investigated as a potential alternative approach to measurement in blood and serum, but it is unclear whether salivary cytokine concentrations can provide valid information about systemic immune function in neurodevelopmental disorders. The goal of this study was to evaluate the potential validity of salivary cytokines as biomarkers of immune dysregulation in RTT. Methods: Saliva samples from 16 individuals with RTT (all female; age range 2ā€“40 years) and 16 healthy control females (age range 2ā€“40 years) were analyzed for concentrations of 12 cytokines. Between-group differences in concentrations, and correlations with clinical severity in the RTT group were evaluated. Results: Concentrations of several salivary cytokines (IL-1Ī², IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, GM-CSF, TNF-Ī±, and VEGF) were increased in RTT compared to controls. The same cytokines showed significant positive correlations with clinical severity scores. There were no differences in concentrations of IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-12p70, and IFN-Ī³. Conclusion: The results suggest that salivary cytokines may be a possible indicator of immune dysregulation in RTT. Future research should investigate whether these results can be applied to other neurodevelopmental disorders
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