Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria

Standard

Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria. / Rocha, Júlio C; Hermida, Álvaro; Jones, Cheryl J; Wu, Yunchou; Clague, Gillian E; Rose, Sarah; Whitehall, Kaleigh B; Ahring, Kirsten K; Pessoa, André L S; Harding, Cary O; Rohr, Fran; Inwood, Anita; Longo, Nicola; Muntau, Ania C; Sivri, Serap; Maillot, François.

in: ORPHANET J RARE DIS, Jahrgang 19, Nr. 1, 12.09.2024, S. 338.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Rocha, JC, Hermida, Á, Jones, CJ, Wu, Y, Clague, GE, Rose, S, Whitehall, KB, Ahring, KK, Pessoa, ALS, Harding, CO, Rohr, F, Inwood, A, Longo, N, Muntau, AC, Sivri, S & Maillot, F 2024, 'Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria', ORPHANET J RARE DIS, Jg. 19, Nr. 1, S. 338. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03223-9

APA

Rocha, J. C., Hermida, Á., Jones, C. J., Wu, Y., Clague, G. E., Rose, S., Whitehall, K. B., Ahring, K. K., Pessoa, A. L. S., Harding, C. O., Rohr, F., Inwood, A., Longo, N., Muntau, A. C., Sivri, S., & Maillot, F. (2024). Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria. ORPHANET J RARE DIS, 19(1), 338. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03223-9

Vancouver

Rocha JC, Hermida Á, Jones CJ, Wu Y, Clague GE, Rose S et al. Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria. ORPHANET J RARE DIS. 2024 Sep 12;19(1):338. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03223-9

Bibtex

@article{784bba2554ba4b318150dcb2aabf5160,
title = "Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Lifelong management of phenylketonuria (PKU) centers on medical nutrition therapy, including dietary phenylalanine (Phe) restriction in addition to Phe-free or low-Phe medical foods/protein substitutes. Studies have reported low bone mineral density (BMD) in mixed-age PKU populations, possibly related to long-term Phe restriction. Therefore, a meta-analysis investigating BMD specifically in adults with PKU was conducted.METHODS: Studies reporting BMD-related outcomes were identified from a systematic literature review evaluating somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with PKU on a Phe-restricted diet (searched February 1, 2022, updated November 1, 2023). Risk of study bias was assessed (Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network checklists). The primary outcome of the meta-analysis was pooled mean BMD Z-scores of different bones. Secondary outcomes were the prevalence of low BMD Z-scores at pre-specified thresholds. Subgroup analyses of mean BMD Z-scores (decade of study publication, controlled versus uncontrolled blood Phe levels, gender) were conducted.RESULTS: BMD-related data from 4097 individuals across 10 studies rated as at least acceptable quality were included. Mean BMD Z-scores were statistically significantly lower compared with an age-matched control or reference (non-PKU) population, across bones, but still within the expected range for age (> -2.0): lumbar spine (seven studies, n = 304), -0.63 (95% confidence interval (CI): -0.74, -0.52); femoral neck (four studies, n = 170), -0.74 (95% CI: -1.25, -0.22); radius (three studies, n = 114), -0.77 (95% CI: -1.21, -0.32); total body (four studies, n = 157), -0.61 (95% CI: -0.77, -0.45). The small number of observations in the subgroup analyses resulted in a high degree of uncertainty, limiting interpretation. Estimated prevalence of BMD Z-scores ≤ -2.0 was 8% (95% CI: 5%, 13%; four studies, n = 221) and < -1.0 was 42% (95% CI: 35%, 51%; five studies, n = 144).CONCLUSIONS: Adults with PKU had lower BMD Z-scores than the reference (non-PKU) population but < 1 in 10 were below the expected range for age. The low number of studies prevents identification of which population characteristics are most impacting BMD. This meta-analysis was supported by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA and is registered with the Research Registry (reviewregistry1476).",
keywords = "Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Bone Density/physiology, Phenylalanine/blood, Phenylketonurias/physiopathology, Systematic Reviews as Topic",
author = "Rocha, {J{\'u}lio C} and {\'A}lvaro Hermida and Jones, {Cheryl J} and Yunchou Wu and Clague, {Gillian E} and Sarah Rose and Whitehall, {Kaleigh B} and Ahring, {Kirsten K} and Pessoa, {Andr{\'e} L S} and Harding, {Cary O} and Fran Rohr and Anita Inwood and Nicola Longo and Muntau, {Ania C} and Serap Sivri and Fran{\c c}ois Maillot",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2024. The Author(s).",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1186/s13023-024-03223-9",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "338",
journal = "ORPHANET J RARE DIS",
issn = "1750-1172",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Meta-analysis of bone mineral density in adults with phenylketonuria

AU - Rocha, Júlio C

AU - Hermida, Álvaro

AU - Jones, Cheryl J

AU - Wu, Yunchou

AU - Clague, Gillian E

AU - Rose, Sarah

AU - Whitehall, Kaleigh B

AU - Ahring, Kirsten K

AU - Pessoa, André L S

AU - Harding, Cary O

AU - Rohr, Fran

AU - Inwood, Anita

AU - Longo, Nicola

AU - Muntau, Ania C

AU - Sivri, Serap

AU - Maillot, François

N1 - © 2024. The Author(s).

PY - 2024/9/12

Y1 - 2024/9/12

N2 - BACKGROUND: Lifelong management of phenylketonuria (PKU) centers on medical nutrition therapy, including dietary phenylalanine (Phe) restriction in addition to Phe-free or low-Phe medical foods/protein substitutes. Studies have reported low bone mineral density (BMD) in mixed-age PKU populations, possibly related to long-term Phe restriction. Therefore, a meta-analysis investigating BMD specifically in adults with PKU was conducted.METHODS: Studies reporting BMD-related outcomes were identified from a systematic literature review evaluating somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with PKU on a Phe-restricted diet (searched February 1, 2022, updated November 1, 2023). Risk of study bias was assessed (Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network checklists). The primary outcome of the meta-analysis was pooled mean BMD Z-scores of different bones. Secondary outcomes were the prevalence of low BMD Z-scores at pre-specified thresholds. Subgroup analyses of mean BMD Z-scores (decade of study publication, controlled versus uncontrolled blood Phe levels, gender) were conducted.RESULTS: BMD-related data from 4097 individuals across 10 studies rated as at least acceptable quality were included. Mean BMD Z-scores were statistically significantly lower compared with an age-matched control or reference (non-PKU) population, across bones, but still within the expected range for age (> -2.0): lumbar spine (seven studies, n = 304), -0.63 (95% confidence interval (CI): -0.74, -0.52); femoral neck (four studies, n = 170), -0.74 (95% CI: -1.25, -0.22); radius (three studies, n = 114), -0.77 (95% CI: -1.21, -0.32); total body (four studies, n = 157), -0.61 (95% CI: -0.77, -0.45). The small number of observations in the subgroup analyses resulted in a high degree of uncertainty, limiting interpretation. Estimated prevalence of BMD Z-scores ≤ -2.0 was 8% (95% CI: 5%, 13%; four studies, n = 221) and < -1.0 was 42% (95% CI: 35%, 51%; five studies, n = 144).CONCLUSIONS: Adults with PKU had lower BMD Z-scores than the reference (non-PKU) population but < 1 in 10 were below the expected range for age. The low number of studies prevents identification of which population characteristics are most impacting BMD. This meta-analysis was supported by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA and is registered with the Research Registry (reviewregistry1476).

AB - BACKGROUND: Lifelong management of phenylketonuria (PKU) centers on medical nutrition therapy, including dietary phenylalanine (Phe) restriction in addition to Phe-free or low-Phe medical foods/protein substitutes. Studies have reported low bone mineral density (BMD) in mixed-age PKU populations, possibly related to long-term Phe restriction. Therefore, a meta-analysis investigating BMD specifically in adults with PKU was conducted.METHODS: Studies reporting BMD-related outcomes were identified from a systematic literature review evaluating somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with PKU on a Phe-restricted diet (searched February 1, 2022, updated November 1, 2023). Risk of study bias was assessed (Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network checklists). The primary outcome of the meta-analysis was pooled mean BMD Z-scores of different bones. Secondary outcomes were the prevalence of low BMD Z-scores at pre-specified thresholds. Subgroup analyses of mean BMD Z-scores (decade of study publication, controlled versus uncontrolled blood Phe levels, gender) were conducted.RESULTS: BMD-related data from 4097 individuals across 10 studies rated as at least acceptable quality were included. Mean BMD Z-scores were statistically significantly lower compared with an age-matched control or reference (non-PKU) population, across bones, but still within the expected range for age (> -2.0): lumbar spine (seven studies, n = 304), -0.63 (95% confidence interval (CI): -0.74, -0.52); femoral neck (four studies, n = 170), -0.74 (95% CI: -1.25, -0.22); radius (three studies, n = 114), -0.77 (95% CI: -1.21, -0.32); total body (four studies, n = 157), -0.61 (95% CI: -0.77, -0.45). The small number of observations in the subgroup analyses resulted in a high degree of uncertainty, limiting interpretation. Estimated prevalence of BMD Z-scores ≤ -2.0 was 8% (95% CI: 5%, 13%; four studies, n = 221) and < -1.0 was 42% (95% CI: 35%, 51%; five studies, n = 144).CONCLUSIONS: Adults with PKU had lower BMD Z-scores than the reference (non-PKU) population but < 1 in 10 were below the expected range for age. The low number of studies prevents identification of which population characteristics are most impacting BMD. This meta-analysis was supported by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA and is registered with the Research Registry (reviewregistry1476).

KW - Adult

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Male

KW - Bone Density/physiology

KW - Phenylalanine/blood

KW - Phenylketonurias/physiopathology

KW - Systematic Reviews as Topic

U2 - 10.1186/s13023-024-03223-9

DO - 10.1186/s13023-024-03223-9

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 39267130

VL - 19

SP - 338

JO - ORPHANET J RARE DIS

JF - ORPHANET J RARE DIS

SN - 1750-1172

IS - 1

ER -