Diagnostic delay in patients with FKRP-related muscular dystrophy

Lauren N Coffey, Carrie M Stephan, M B Zimmerman, Chyan K Decker, Katherine D Mathews, Lauren N Coffey, Carrie M Stephan, M B Zimmerman, Chyan K Decker, Katherine D Mathews

Abstract

Diagnostic journey for people with FKRP mutations participating in a dystroglycanopathy natural history study (n = 68; NCT00313677) was analyzed. Earliest symptoms and age at muscular dystrophy diagnosis were abstracted from subject-reported medical history and record review. Initial signs/symptoms were classified as chronic motor dysfunction (e.g., delayed motor milestones, weakness, falling; n = 40, 59%), elevated transaminases (n = 7, 10%), or acute/intermittent symptoms (myoglobinuria, myalgia, febrile illness-associated acute weakness; n = 21, 31%). Median time from sign/symptom onset to diagnosis was 6.5 years and differed by symptom group: 7.5 years for motor group, 9 years for acute/intermittent group, and 4 years for elevated transaminases group. The sign/symptom category that most commonly resulted in a diagnosis was chronic motor dysfunction (n = 45). Of those without clear weakness as first symptom (n = 55), 36.4% were not diagnosed with MD until weakness became apparent. Median time to diagnosis was shortest for those with febrile illness-associated acute weakness (0.25 years). Median time from first sign/symptom to MD diagnosis has decreased incrementally from 18.8 years for those with onset in the 1970s to < 10 years for symptom onset occurring after 2000. Awareness of disease presentation variability will aid in earlier diagnosis, which is increasingly important with treatments in development.

Keywords: Diagnosis; Diagnostic delay; Dystroglycanopathy; FKRP; Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy; Weakness.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1:
Figure 1:
Initial sign/symptom vs sign/symptom leading to diagnosis of MD

Source: PubMed

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