Agalsidase beta treatment is associated with improved quality of life in patients with Fabry disease: findings from the Fabry Registry
- PMID: 20885332
- DOI: 10.1097/GIM.0b013e3181f13a4a
Agalsidase beta treatment is associated with improved quality of life in patients with Fabry disease: findings from the Fabry Registry
Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the effect of agalsidase beta on longitudinal health-related quality of life in patients with Fabry disease.
Methods: The SF-36® Health Survey was used to measure health-related quality of life in Fabry Registry patients. Seventy-one men and 59 women who were treated with agalsidase beta (median dose: 1.0 mg/kg/² weeks) and who had baseline and at least 2 yearly posttreatment health-related quality of life measurements were included in these analyses. A repeated measures model was used to analyze change in score from baseline.
Results: Men improved in the physical component summary and in all eight scales of the SF-36 after 1 and 2 years and in the mental component summary after 1 year of agalsidase beta treatment (P < 0.05). Women improved in the mental component summary and in six of the eight scales after 1 and/or 2 years of treatment. Patients whose baseline SF-36 scores were below the median showed the greatest improvements. These responses were comparable with or greater than the published effects of various treatments for multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, central neuropathic pain, and Gaucher disease.
Conclusion: Long-term treatment with agalsidase beta resulted in substantial improvements in health-related quality of life in both men and women; the effect was more pronounced in men.
Comment in
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Agalsidase treatment for Fabry disease: uses and rivalries.Genet Med. 2010 Nov;12(11):684-5. doi: 10.1097/GIM.0b013e3181f9a056. Genet Med. 2010. PMID: 20975568 No abstract available.
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