1. Developmental delay can precede neurologic regression in early onset metachromatic leukodystrophy.
- Author
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Adang LA, Groeschel S, Grzyb C, D'Aiello R, Gavazzi F, Sherbini O, Bronner N, Patel A, Vincent A, Sevagamoorthy A, Mutua S, Muirhead K, Schmidt J, Pizzino A, Yu E, Jin D, Eichler F, Fraser JL, Emrick L, Van Haren K, Boulanger JM, Ruzhnikov M, Sylvain M, Nguyen CÉ, Potic A, Keller S, Fatemi A, Uebergang E, Poe M, Yazdani PA, Bernat J, Lindstrom K, Bonkowsky JL, Bernard G, Stutterd CA, Orchard P, Gupta AO, Ljungberg M, Groenborg S, Zambon A, Locatelli S, Fumagalli F, Elguen S, Kehrer C, Krägeloh-Mann I, Shults J, Vanderver A, and Escolar ML
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Infant, Child, Adolescent, Cohort Studies, Disease Progression, Leukodystrophy, Metachromatic diagnosis, Leukodystrophy, Metachromatic pathology, Leukodystrophy, Metachromatic genetics, Developmental Disabilities diagnosis, Age of Onset
- Abstract
Objective: Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder. Emerging therapies are most effective in the presymptomatic phase, and thus defining this window is critical. We hypothesize that early development delay may precede developmental plateau. With the advent of presymptomatic screening platforms and transformative therapies, it is essential to define the onset of neurologic disease., Methods: The specific ages of gain and loss of developmental milestones were captured from the medical records of individuals affected by MLD. Milestone acquisition was characterized as: on target (obtained before the age limit of 90th percentile plus 2 standard deviations compared to a normative dataset), delayed (obtained after 90th percentile plus 2 standard deviations), or plateau (skills never gained). Regression was defined as the age at which skills were lost. LI-MLD was defined by age at onset before 2.5 years., Results: Across an international cohort, 351 subjects were included (n = 194 LI-MLD subcohort). The median age at presentation of the LI-MLD cohort was 1.4 years (25th-75th %ile: 1.0-1.5). Within the LI-MLD cohort, 75/194 (39%) had developmental delay (or plateau) prior to MLD clinical presentation. Among the LI-MLD cohort with a minimum of 1.5 years of follow-up (n = 187), 73 (39.0%) subjects never attained independent ambulation. Within LI-MLD + delay subcohort, the median time between first missed milestone target to MLD decline was 0.60 years (maximum distance from delay to onset: 1.9 years)., Interpretation: Early developmental delay precedes regression in a subset of children affected by LI-MLD, defining the onset of neurologic dysfunction earlier than previously appreciated. The use of realworld data prior to diagnosis revealed an early deviation from typical development. Close monitoring for early developmental delay in presymptomatic individuals may help in earlier diagnosis with important consequences for treatment decisions., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Dr. Adang is an advisor to Takeda Pharmaceuticals (enzyme replacement study for MLD), Orchard Therapeutics (gene therapy development for MLD), and is a site sub-investigator for the Takeda trial (enzyme replacement study); Dr. Gröschel is an advisor Takeda and Orchard Therapeutics; Dr. Bonkowsky is a site principal investigator for the Takeda trial; Dr. Bernard is a site principal investigator for the Takeda trial; Dr. Weller Grønborg is a consultant to Orchard Therapeutics; Dr. Orchard is a consultant to Orchard Therapeutics. Dr. Krägeloh-Mann is an advisor to Takeda, Orchard Therapeutics; Dr. Vanderver is an advisor to Takeda, Passagebio, Orchard; and is site PI Takeda trial; Dr. Escolar is an advisor to Takeda, Janssen; she is employed by Forge Biologics; Dr. Fumagalli is the license holder of OTL-200, I Orchard Therapeutics trial, advisor Orchard, Takeda, funding Telethon Foundation, GSK, Orchard. Dr. Eichler, Dr. Fatemi, Dr. Gavazzi, Dr. Sevagamoorthy, Ms. Mutua, Ms. Muirhead, Ms. Schmidt, Ms. Pizzino, Ms. Yu, Ms. Jin, Mr. Vincent, Ms. Grzyb, Mr. D'Aiello, Mr. Sherbini, Mr. Bronner, Mr. Patel, Dr. Fraser, Dr. Emrick, Dr. Van Haren, Dr. Ruzhnikov, Dr. Keller, Ms. Uebergang, Ms. Poe, Dr. Yazdani, Dr. Bernat, Dr. Lindstrom, Dr. Stutterd, Dr. Gupta, Dr. Boulanger, Dr. Sylvain, Dr. Nguyen, Dr. Potic, Dr. Ljungberg, Dr. Zambon, Ms. Locatelli, Ms. Elgün, Dr. Kehrer, and Dr. Shults have no relevant disclosures., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
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