Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases (Nov 2019)

Incidence of acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura in Germany: a hospital level study

  • Wolfgang Miesbach,
  • Jan Menne,
  • Martin Bommer,
  • Ulf Schönermarck,
  • Thorsten Feldkamp,
  • Martin Nitschke,
  • Timm H. Westhoff,
  • Felix S. Seibert,
  • Rainer Woitas,
  • Rui Sousa,
  • Michael Wolf,
  • Stefan Walzer,
  • Björn Schwander

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-019-1240-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic Purpura (aTTP) is a life-threatening ultra-orphan disease with a reported annual incidence between 1.5 and 6.0 cases per million in Europe and mainly affecting otherwise young and healthy adults aged 40 years on average. The goal of this study was to assess the incidence of aTTP in Germany. Methods A systematic review was performed to determine the published evidence on the aTTP epidemiology in Germany. To obtain additional evidence on the proportion of aTTP cases within the national Thrombotic Microangiopathy (TMA) population a hospital-level study was performed, using a retrospective data collection approach. Diagnosis of aTTP was confirmed if ADAMTS13 level were < 10% and/or the medical records explicitly mentioned aTTP diagnosis. The aggregated hospital data were then projected to the national level using logistic regression techniques. Results The systematic literature search did not provide incidence estimates of aTTP in Germany. Eight centers (≈27% of the top 30 TMA hospitals) delivered data according to a predefined data collection form. On average (year 2014–2016) a total number of 172 aTTP episodes per year was projected (95% confidence interval [95%CI]: 132–212). The majority were newly diagnosed aTTP cases (n = 121; 95%CI: 105–129), and 51 were recurrent aTTP cases (95%CI: 27–84). The average annual projected incidence (year 2014–2016) of aTTP episodes was 2.10 per million inhabitants in Germany (95%CI: 1.60–2.58). Conclusions The determined annual incidence of newly diagnosed aTTP cases and the overall annual incidence of aTTP episodes in Germany confirm the ultra-orphan character of aTTP. An external validation against international registries (France, UK and USA) shows that our findings are quite comparable with those international incidence rates.

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