Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases (Aug 2024)

Angelman syndrome in Poland: current diagnosis and therapy status—the caregiver perspective: a questionnaire study

  • Agata Suleja,
  • Katarzyna Milska-Musa,
  • Łukasz Przysło,
  • Marzena Bednarczyk,
  • Marcin Kostecki,
  • Dominik Cysewski,
  • Paweł Matryba,
  • Anna Rozensztrauch,
  • Michał Dwornik,
  • Marcin Opacki,
  • Robert Śmigiel,
  • Kacper Łukasiewicz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03292-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background Angelman syndrome (AS) is a rare neurodevelopmental disease caused by imprinting disorders that impede the production of the ubiquitin E3A ligase protein (UBE3A). AS affects multiple systems, with the main symptoms including epilepsy, psychomotor disorders and speech development disorders. To date, no study has been conducted in the Polish population to verify the condition's diagnosis and treatment process. Results Seventy patients with the median age of 60 months were included into the analysis. 80% of patients were diagnosed with deletion, 19.9% with a mutation of UBE3A gene, 4.3% with paternal uniparental disomy (UPD) and 2.8% with an imprinting defect. The mean age of first symptoms was 5 months, while the mean age of diagnosis was 29 months (earliest in deletion group at 23 months), and the median duration of diagnosis process was 7 months. The average time to a clinical geneticist appointment was 3 months. 37.9% of the patients initially received a different diagnosis. Epileptic seizures were present in 88.6% of the individuals. 98.6% of the studied group were under care of a pediatric neurologist, 47.1% of a gastroenterologist. A ketogenic diet was used in 7.1% of patients. Caregivers identified finding a specialist suitable for AS patients and access to genetic testing as the biggest problems. Conclusions The care of patients with AS in Poland is carried out according to the European and world standards, however there is an impeded access to clinical geneticist, and the knowledge about rare diseases among primary healthcare physicians could be improved. Moreover, access to AS care specialists and coordination of care is limited. There is a need for creation a specialized centers and databases for AS patients.

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