Kidney & Blood Pressure Research (Dec 2016)

The Prevalence of Fabry Disease in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease in Turkey: The TURKFAB Study

  • Kultigin Turkmen,
  • Aydın Guclu,
  • Garip Sahin,
  • Ismail Kocyigit,
  • Levent Demirtas,
  • Fatih Mehmet Erdur,
  • Erkan Sengül,
  • Oktay Ozkan,
  • Habib Emre,
  • Faruk Turgut,
  • Hilmi Unal,
  • Murat Karaman,
  • Cengiz Acıkel,
  • Hasan Esen,
  • Ebru Balli,
  • Gulfidan Bıtırgen,
  • Halil Zeki Tonbul,
  • Mahmut Ilker Yılmaz,
  • Alberto Ortiz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000452605
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41, no. 6
pp. 1016 – 1024

Abstract

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Background/Aims: Fabry disease is a treatable cause of chronic kidney disease (CKD) characterized by a genetic deficiency of α-galactosidase A. European Renal Best Practice (ERBP) recommends screening for Fabry disease in CKD patients. However, this is based on expert opinion and there are no reports of the prevalence of Fabry disease in stage 1-5 CKD. Hence, we investigated the prevalence of Fabry disease in CKD patients not receiving renal replacement therapy. Methods: This prospective study assessed α-galactosidase activity in dried blood spots in 313 stage 1-5 CKD patients, 167 males, between ages of 18-70 years whose etiology of CKD was unknown and were not receiving renal replacement therapy. The diagnosis was confirmed by GLA gene mutation analysis. Results: Three (all males) of 313 CKD patients (0.95%) were diagnosed of Fabry disease, for a prevalence in males of 1.80%. Family screening identified 8 aditional Fabry patients with CKD. Of a total of 11 Fabry patients, 7 were male and started enzyme replacement therapy and 4 were female. The most frequent manifestations in male patients were fatigue (100%), tinnitus, vertigo, acroparesthesia, hypohidrosis, cornea verticillata and angiokeratoma (all 85%), heat intolerance (71%), and abdominal pain (57%). The most frequent manifestations in female patients were fatigue and cornea verticillata (50%), and tinnitus, vertigo and angiokeratoma (25%). Three patients had severe episodic abdominal pain attacks and proteinuria, and were misdiagnosed as familial Mediterranean fever. Conclusions: The prevalence of Fabry disease in selected CKD patients is in the range found among renal replacement therapy patients, but the disease is diagnosed at an earlier, treatable stage. These data support the ERBP recommendation to screen for Fabry disease in patients with CKD of unknown origin.

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