7 research outputs found
Economic evaluation of Motor Neuron Diseases : a nationwide cross-sectional analysis in Germany
Background and objectives:
Motor Neuron Diseases (MND) are rare diseases but have a high impact on affected individuals and society. This study aims to perform an economic evaluation of MND in Germany.
Methods:
Primary patient-reported data were collected including individual impairment, the use of medical and non-medical resources, and self-rated Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). Annual socio-economic costs per year as well as Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) were calculated.
Results:
404 patients with a diagnosis of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) or Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP) were enrolled. Total annual costs per patient were estimated at 83,060€ in ALS, 206,856€ in SMA and 27,074€ in HSP. The main cost drivers were informal care (all MND) and disease-modifying treatments (SMA). Self-reported HRQoL was best in patients with HSP (mean EuroQoL Five Dimension Five Level (EQ-5D-5L) index value 0.67) and lowest in SMA patients (mean EQ-5D-5L index value 0.39). QALYs for patients with ALS were estimated to be 1.89 QALYs, 23.08 for patients with HSP and 14.97 for patients with SMA, respectively. Cost-utilities were estimated as follows: 138,960€/QALY for ALS, 525,033€/QALY for SMA, and 49,573€/QALY for HSP. The main predictors of the high cost of illness and low HRQoL were disease progression and loss of individual autonomy.
Conclusion:
As loss of individual autonomy was the main cost predictor, therapeutic and supportive measures to maintain this autonomy may contribute to reducing high personal burden and also long-term costs, e.g., care dependency and absenteeism from work
Economic evaluation of Motor Neuron Diseases: a nationwide cross-sectional analysis in Germany
Background and objectivesMotor Neuron Diseases (MND) are rare diseases but have a high impact on affected individuals and society. This study aims to perform an economic evaluation of MND in Germany.MethodsPrimary patient-reported data were collected including individual impairment, the use of medical and non-medical resources, and self-rated Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). Annual socio-economic costs per year as well as Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) were calculated.Results404 patients with a diagnosis of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) or Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP) were enrolled. Total annual costs per patient were estimated at 83,060euro in ALS, 206,856euro in SMA and 27,074euro in HSP. The main cost drivers were informal care (all MND) and disease-modifying treatments (SMA). Self-reported HRQoL was best in patients with HSP (mean EuroQoL Five Dimension Five Level (EQ-5D-5L) index value 0.67) and lowest in SMA patients (mean EQ-5D-5L index value 0.39). QALYs for patients with ALS were estimated to be 1.89 QALYs, 23.08 for patients with HSP and 14.97 for patients with SMA, respectively. Cost-utilities were estimated as follows: 138,960euro/QALY for ALS, 525,033euro/QALY for SMA, and 49,573euro/QALY for HSP. The main predictors of the high cost of illness and low HRQoL were disease progression and loss of individual autonomy.ConclusionAs loss of individual autonomy was the main cost predictor, therapeutic and supportive measures to maintain this autonomy may contribute to reducing high personal burden and also long-term costs, e.g., care dependency and absenteeism from work
Bi-allelic HPDL Variants Cause a Neurodegenerative Disease Ranging from Neonatal Encephalopathy to Adolescent-Onset Spastic Paraplegia
International audienceWe report bi-allelic pathogenic HPDL variants as a cause of a progressive, pediatric-onset spastic movement disorder with variable clinical presentation. The single-exon gene HPDL encodes a protein of unknown function with sequence similarity to 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase. Exome sequencing studies in 13 families revealed bi-allelic HPDL variants in each of the 17 individuals affected with this clinically heterogeneous autosomal-recessive neurological disorder. HPDL levels were significantly reduced in fibroblast cell lines derived from more severely affected individuals, indicating the identified HPDL variants resulted in the loss of HPDL protein. Clinical presentation ranged from severe, neonatal-onset neurodevelopmental delay with neuroimaging findings resembling mitochondrial encephalopathy to milder manifestation of adolescent-onset, isolated hereditary spastic paraplegia. All affected individuals developed spasticity predominantly of the lower limbs over the course of the disease. We demonstrated through bioinformatic and cellular studies that HPDL has a mitochondrial localization signal and consequently localizes to mitochondria suggesting a putative role in mitochondrial metabolism. Taken together, these genetic, bioinformatic, and functional studies demonstrate HPDL is a mitochondrial protein, the loss of which causes a clinically variable form of pediatric-onset spastic movement disorder
NfL and pNfH are increased in Friedreich's ataxia
Objective To assess neurofilaments as neurodegenerative biomarkers in
serum of patients with Friedreich's ataxia. Methods Single molecule
array measurements of neurofilament light (NfL) and heavy chain (pNfH)
in 99 patients with genetically confirmed Friedreich's ataxia.
Correlation of NfL/pNfH serum levels with disease severity, disease
duration, age, age at onset, and GAA repeat length. Results Median serum
levels of NfL were 21.2 pg/ml (range 3.6-49.3) in controls and 26.1
pg/ml (0-78.1) in Friedreich's ataxia (p = 0.002). pNfH levels were 23.5
pg/ml (13.3-43.3) in controls and 92 pg/ml (3.1-303) in Friedreich's
ataxia (p = 0.0004). NfL levels were significantly increased in younger
patients (age 16-31 years, p < 0.001) and patients aged 32-47 years (p =
0.008), but not in patients of age 48 years and older (p = 0.41). In a
longitudinal assessment, there was no difference in NfL levels in 14
patients with repeated sampling 2 years after baseline measurement.
Levels of NfL correlated inversely with GAA1 repeat length (r = - 0.24,
p = 0.02) but not with disease severity (r = - 0.13, p = 0.22), disease
duration (r = - 0.06, p = 0.53), or age at onset (r = 0.05, p = 0.62).
Conclusion Serum levels of NfL and pNfH are elevated in Friedreich's
ataxia, but differences to healthy controls decrease with increasing
age. Long-term longitudinal data are required to explore whether this
reflects a selection bias from early death of more severely affected
individuals or a slowing down of the neurodegenerative process with age.
In a pilot study over 2 years of follow-up-a period relevant for
biomarkers indicating treatment effects-we found NfL levels to be
stable