{"id":744,"date":"2011-06-04T10:11:05","date_gmt":"2011-06-04T10:11:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.touchneurology.com\/2011\/06\/04\/niemann-pick-type-c-disease-report-on-results-from-the-niemann-pick-type-c-patient-and-healthcare-professional-survey\/"},"modified":"2011-06-04T10:11:05","modified_gmt":"2011-06-04T10:11:05","slug":"niemann-pick-type-c-disease-report-on-results-from-the-niemann-pick-type-c-patient-and-healthcare-professional-survey","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/touchneurology.com\/neurometabolic-disease\/journal-articles\/niemann-pick-type-c-disease-report-on-results-from-the-niemann-pick-type-c-patient-and-healthcare-professional-survey\/","title":{"rendered":"Niemann-Pick Type C Disease \u2013 Report on Results from the Niemann-Pick Type C Patient and Healthcare Professional Survey"},"content":{"rendered":"

Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC) is a pan ethnic, progressive neurological condition that is estimated to affect an estimated minimum of one in 120,000 Western Europeans.1<\/sup> The neurological symptoms stem from a characteristic autosomal recessive storage of various lysosomal lipids, including unesterified cholesterol, glycosphingolipids and sphingosine. These lipids accumulate in a number of organs in tissues, most noticeably in the liver, spleen and brain.2 <\/sup>This excess storage of lipids, possibly by a number of mechanisms, causes progressive and disabling neurological symptoms such as clumsiness, ataxia, cognitive dysfunction and dysphagia, with increasing severity and decreasing quality of life in the later stages of disease.1,3,4<\/sup> However, the diagnosis of NPC is complicated by the clinical spectrum of the disease itself: the wide range of symptoms are not disease-specific, nor are they limited to specific stages of disease development. NPC has four subtypes arising from different mutations in the NPC1 gene, which codes for a membrane glycoprotein with multiple membrane-spanning domains that facilitates intracellular cholesterol trafficking and esterification. In addition, the NPC2 gene, which encodes the HE1 cholesterol binding protein has been identified. Rare cases of NPC have been reported to have this mutation that have a pattern of lysosomal storage that is virtually restricted to neurons rather than in bone marrow and viscera as well.5<\/sup> NPC and its genetic origins are therefore varied; it can be difficult to identify and its reported incidence may be an underestimate.6,7<\/sup> Confirmation of NPC requires biochemical and genetic testing, histological analyses and imaging techniques. This often requires consultation with specialist centres, but the early symptoms must first be recognised by the initial physician for a referral to be made. Both the difficulties in diagnosis and the clinical symptoms can therefore impose a great emotional and economic burden on patients, their families and on society in general. <\/p>\n

Management of Niemann-Pick Type C Disease <\/b>
There is no cure for NPC, and treatment has historically focussed on the alleviation of clinical symptoms to improve quality of life among patients. Management of neurological manifestations has been achieved using tricyclic antidepressants, central nervous system (CNS) stimulants, antiepileptic drugs and anticholinergics.2<\/sup> Supportive care in the form of physical, speech or occupational therapy are also available for the prevention or management of clinical manifestations of NPC and any associated secondary complications.8 Disease-specific treatments were not available until the approval of miglustat (Zavesca\u00ae) in some countries in 2009 for the treatment of progressive neurological manifestations of adult patients and paediatric patients with NPC. <\/p>\n

Current Outlook <\/b>
Prognosis is poor for patients with NPC, but the rate of disease progression is highly variable between patients. This underscores the need for accurate and earlier diagnosis coupled with therapies that stabilise symptoms of NPC and improve quality of life. To address this clinical need, research is ongoing at many expert centres to provide a greater understanding of the epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment of NPC.9\u201312<\/sup> An example of these researchinitiatives is the NPC and Healthcare Professional Survey. <\/p>\n

The Niemann-Pick Type C Patient andHealthcare Professional Survey <\/b>
Purpose of the Study <\/i>
The NPC Patient and Healthcare Professional Survey was conducted in six countries (the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and The Netherlands) with the intent of providing insight concerning the complexities of NPC diagnosis and first-hand experiences in diagnoses of NPC. In-depth qualitative interviews were performed with the parents or carers of 26 families in which one or more family members was diagnosed with NPC; 28 patients (11 males, 17 females) between the ages of three and 36 years were involved. Interviews involving families with more than one family member who had been diagnosed with NPC focused on the first member to be diagnosed. Interviews were concurrently held with four healthcare professionals who are experts in the field of diagnosis and management of NPC. These were: an NPC specialist nurse, a neurological psychiatrist, a paediatric geneticist and a paediatrician specialising in hereditary metabolic disease. The goals of this survey were threefold: <\/p>\n