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KPV

Lys-Pro-Val, α-MSH (11-13)

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Studies 104
Trials 57
2022 pubmed

International Recommendations for the Diagnosis and Management of Patients With Adrenoleukodystrophy: A Consensus-Based Approach.

Engelen. Marc M; van Ballegoij. Wouter J C WJC; Mallack. Eric James EJ; Van Haren. Keith P KP; Köhler. Wolfgang W; Salsano. Ettore E; van Trotsenburg. A S P ASP; Mochel. Fanny F; Sevin. Caroline C; Regelmann. Molly O MO; Tritos. Nicholas A NA; Halper. Alyssa A; Lachmann. Robin H RH; Davison. James J; Raymond. Gerald V GV; Lund. Troy C TC; Orchard. Paul J PJ; Kuehl. Joern-Sven JS; Lindemans. Caroline A CA; Caruso. Paul P; Turk. Bela Rui BR; Moser. Ann B AB; Vaz. Frédéric M FM; Ferdinandusse. Sacha S; Kemp. Stephan S; Fatemi. Ali A; Eichler. Florian S FS; Huffnagel. Irene C IC

Key Findings

  • ALD has three main clinical forms that vary widely and are not linked to specific gene mutations.
  • Regular monitoring for adrenal failure and brain disease is advised for all male patients.
  • Hematopoietic cell transplant is the preferred treatment for the cerebral form of ALD.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers and self‑directed health optimizers, these guidelines have little to no direct relevance. The paper is aimed at clinicians treating a rare disease, not at improving general metabolic health, body composition, or cognitive performance.

Summary

This paper gives expert recommendations for diagnosing and treating a rare genetic disorder called adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD). It focuses on how doctors should monitor patients and when to use bone‑marrow transplants, but it does not provide any information that can be applied to general health, longevity, or performance optimization.

Abstract

Pathogenic variants in the <i>ABCD1</i> gene cause adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), a progressive metabolic disorder characterized by 3 core clinical syndromes: a slowly progressive myeloneuropathy, a rapidly progressive inflammatory leukodystrophy (cerebral ALD), and primary adrenal insufficiency. These syndromes are not present in all individuals and are not related to genotype. Cerebral ALD and adrenal insufficiency require early detection and intervention and warrant clinical surveillance because of variable penetrance and age at onset. Newborn screening has increased the number of presymptomatic individuals under observation, but clinical surveillance protocols vary. We used a consensus-based modified Delphi approach among 28 international ALD experts to develop best-practice recommendations for diagnosis, clinical surveillance, and treatment of patients with ALD. We identified 39 discrete areas of consensus. Regular monitoring to detect the onset of adrenal failure and conversion to cerebral ALD is recommended in all male patients. Hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) is the treatment of choice for cerebral ALD. This guideline addresses a clinical need in the ALD community worldwide as the number of overall diagnoses and presymptomatic individuals is increasing because of newborn screening and greater availability of next-generation sequencing. The poor ability to predict the disease course informs current monitoring intervals but remains subject to change as more data emerge. This knowledge gap should direct future research and illustrates once again that international collaboration among physicians, researchers, and patients is essential to improving care.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2022

Date

2022-09-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1212/wnl.0000000000201374