Systematic literature review of the somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with phenylketonuria

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Systematic literature review of the somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with phenylketonuria. / Whitehall, Kaleigh B; Rose, Sarah; Clague, Gillian E; Ahring, Kirsten K; Bilder, Deborah A; Harding, Cary O; Hermida, Álvaro; Inwood, Anita; Longo, Nicola; Maillot, François; Muntau, Ania C; Pessoa, André L S; Rocha, Júlio C; Rohr, Fran; Sivri, Serap; Said, Jack; Oshinbolu, Sheun; Sibbring, Gillian C.

in: ORPHANET J RARE DIS, Jahrgang 19, Nr. 1, 293, 12.08.2024.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ReviewForschung

Harvard

Whitehall, KB, Rose, S, Clague, GE, Ahring, KK, Bilder, DA, Harding, CO, Hermida, Á, Inwood, A, Longo, N, Maillot, F, Muntau, AC, Pessoa, ALS, Rocha, JC, Rohr, F, Sivri, S, Said, J, Oshinbolu, S & Sibbring, GC 2024, 'Systematic literature review of the somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with phenylketonuria', ORPHANET J RARE DIS, Jg. 19, Nr. 1, 293. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03203-z

APA

Whitehall, K. B., Rose, S., Clague, G. E., Ahring, K. K., Bilder, D. A., Harding, C. O., Hermida, Á., Inwood, A., Longo, N., Maillot, F., Muntau, A. C., Pessoa, A. L. S., Rocha, J. C., Rohr, F., Sivri, S., Said, J., Oshinbolu, S., & Sibbring, G. C. (2024). Systematic literature review of the somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with phenylketonuria. ORPHANET J RARE DIS, 19(1), [293]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03203-z

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{29c46ab482af4c99b5b226c9869cccf4,
title = "Systematic literature review of the somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with phenylketonuria",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an inborn error of phenylalanine (Phe) metabolism that, if untreated, causes Phe accumulation in the brain leading to neurophysiologic alterations and poor outcomes. Lifelong management centers on dietary Phe restriction, yet long-term complete metabolic control is unachievable for many adults. High blood Phe levels or chronic Phe and intact protein restriction in the diet may lead to somatic comorbidities. A systematic literature review was conducted to evaluate somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with PKU.METHODS: Clinical and observational studies reporting somatic comorbidities experienced by individuals with PKU aged ≥ 16 years (or classified as adults) evaluating a Phe-restricted diet with or without pharmacologic therapy versus no therapeutic intervention (including healthy controls), or pharmacologic therapy versus a Phe-restricted diet alone, were identified. PubMed{\textregistered} was searched (February 1, 2022 and updated November 1, 2023), using a pre-defined search strategy, followed by two-stage screening and data extraction. Included studies were grouped by PKU population comparison.RESULTS: 1185 records were screened; 51 studies across 12,602 individuals were extracted. Bone-related abnormalities were the most reported outcome (n = 21); several outcome measures were used. Original study groupings included: Phe-restricted diet versus healthy controls or reference values (n = 40); treatment-adherent versus those non-adherent (n = 12). Additional groups added as part of a protocol amendment included: different Phe-restricted diets (n = 4); severe versus less severe disease (n = 5). Vote counting indicated a higher burden of ≥ 1 comorbidity (or outcome measure) for the Phe-restricted diet group by 37 of 38 studies included in the analysis of Phe-restricted diet versus healthy controls; higher burden in healthy controls was reported in 12 studies. Vote counting was similar between those treatment adherent (n = 7) versus non-adherent (n = 10).CONCLUSIONS: Adults with PKU have a higher comorbidity burden than a non-PKU population. More robust studies are needed to better understand the relationship between effective metabolic control and comorbidity burden, using consistent outcome measures. This SLR was supported by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA, and is registered with the Research Registry (reviewregistry1476).",
keywords = "Humans, Phenylketonurias/diet therapy, Adult, Comorbidity, Phenylalanine/blood",
author = "Whitehall, {Kaleigh B} and Sarah Rose and Clague, {Gillian E} and Ahring, {Kirsten K} and Bilder, {Deborah A} and Harding, {Cary O} and {\'A}lvaro Hermida and Anita Inwood and Nicola Longo and Fran{\c c}ois Maillot and Muntau, {Ania C} and Pessoa, {Andr{\'e} L S} and Rocha, {J{\'u}lio C} and Fran Rohr and Serap Sivri and Jack Said and Sheun Oshinbolu and Sibbring, {Gillian C}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2024. The Author(s).",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1186/s13023-024-03203-z",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
journal = "ORPHANET J RARE DIS",
issn = "1750-1172",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Systematic literature review of the somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with phenylketonuria

AU - Whitehall, Kaleigh B

AU - Rose, Sarah

AU - Clague, Gillian E

AU - Ahring, Kirsten K

AU - Bilder, Deborah A

AU - Harding, Cary O

AU - Hermida, Álvaro

AU - Inwood, Anita

AU - Longo, Nicola

AU - Maillot, François

AU - Muntau, Ania C

AU - Pessoa, André L S

AU - Rocha, Júlio C

AU - Rohr, Fran

AU - Sivri, Serap

AU - Said, Jack

AU - Oshinbolu, Sheun

AU - Sibbring, Gillian C

N1 - © 2024. The Author(s).

PY - 2024/8/12

Y1 - 2024/8/12

N2 - BACKGROUND: Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an inborn error of phenylalanine (Phe) metabolism that, if untreated, causes Phe accumulation in the brain leading to neurophysiologic alterations and poor outcomes. Lifelong management centers on dietary Phe restriction, yet long-term complete metabolic control is unachievable for many adults. High blood Phe levels or chronic Phe and intact protein restriction in the diet may lead to somatic comorbidities. A systematic literature review was conducted to evaluate somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with PKU.METHODS: Clinical and observational studies reporting somatic comorbidities experienced by individuals with PKU aged ≥ 16 years (or classified as adults) evaluating a Phe-restricted diet with or without pharmacologic therapy versus no therapeutic intervention (including healthy controls), or pharmacologic therapy versus a Phe-restricted diet alone, were identified. PubMed® was searched (February 1, 2022 and updated November 1, 2023), using a pre-defined search strategy, followed by two-stage screening and data extraction. Included studies were grouped by PKU population comparison.RESULTS: 1185 records were screened; 51 studies across 12,602 individuals were extracted. Bone-related abnormalities were the most reported outcome (n = 21); several outcome measures were used. Original study groupings included: Phe-restricted diet versus healthy controls or reference values (n = 40); treatment-adherent versus those non-adherent (n = 12). Additional groups added as part of a protocol amendment included: different Phe-restricted diets (n = 4); severe versus less severe disease (n = 5). Vote counting indicated a higher burden of ≥ 1 comorbidity (or outcome measure) for the Phe-restricted diet group by 37 of 38 studies included in the analysis of Phe-restricted diet versus healthy controls; higher burden in healthy controls was reported in 12 studies. Vote counting was similar between those treatment adherent (n = 7) versus non-adherent (n = 10).CONCLUSIONS: Adults with PKU have a higher comorbidity burden than a non-PKU population. More robust studies are needed to better understand the relationship between effective metabolic control and comorbidity burden, using consistent outcome measures. This SLR was supported by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA, and is registered with the Research Registry (reviewregistry1476).

AB - BACKGROUND: Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an inborn error of phenylalanine (Phe) metabolism that, if untreated, causes Phe accumulation in the brain leading to neurophysiologic alterations and poor outcomes. Lifelong management centers on dietary Phe restriction, yet long-term complete metabolic control is unachievable for many adults. High blood Phe levels or chronic Phe and intact protein restriction in the diet may lead to somatic comorbidities. A systematic literature review was conducted to evaluate somatic comorbidities experienced by adults with PKU.METHODS: Clinical and observational studies reporting somatic comorbidities experienced by individuals with PKU aged ≥ 16 years (or classified as adults) evaluating a Phe-restricted diet with or without pharmacologic therapy versus no therapeutic intervention (including healthy controls), or pharmacologic therapy versus a Phe-restricted diet alone, were identified. PubMed® was searched (February 1, 2022 and updated November 1, 2023), using a pre-defined search strategy, followed by two-stage screening and data extraction. Included studies were grouped by PKU population comparison.RESULTS: 1185 records were screened; 51 studies across 12,602 individuals were extracted. Bone-related abnormalities were the most reported outcome (n = 21); several outcome measures were used. Original study groupings included: Phe-restricted diet versus healthy controls or reference values (n = 40); treatment-adherent versus those non-adherent (n = 12). Additional groups added as part of a protocol amendment included: different Phe-restricted diets (n = 4); severe versus less severe disease (n = 5). Vote counting indicated a higher burden of ≥ 1 comorbidity (or outcome measure) for the Phe-restricted diet group by 37 of 38 studies included in the analysis of Phe-restricted diet versus healthy controls; higher burden in healthy controls was reported in 12 studies. Vote counting was similar between those treatment adherent (n = 7) versus non-adherent (n = 10).CONCLUSIONS: Adults with PKU have a higher comorbidity burden than a non-PKU population. More robust studies are needed to better understand the relationship between effective metabolic control and comorbidity burden, using consistent outcome measures. This SLR was supported by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., Novato, CA, and is registered with the Research Registry (reviewregistry1476).

KW - Humans

KW - Phenylketonurias/diet therapy

KW - Adult

KW - Comorbidity

KW - Phenylalanine/blood

U2 - 10.1186/s13023-024-03203-z

DO - 10.1186/s13023-024-03203-z

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 39135125

VL - 19

JO - ORPHANET J RARE DIS

JF - ORPHANET J RARE DIS

SN - 1750-1172

IS - 1

M1 - 293

ER -