Abstract
BackgroundWith the advent of the first targeted therapy for Rett Syndrome (RTT), a comprehensive assessment of the journey of RTT is needed to elucidate on present unmet needs in this population. This study characterized females with RTT in the United States and their disease journey with respect to longitudinal treatment patterns, RTT-related outcomes, and changes in disease severity.MethodsThis retrospective cohort study used registry data of females with RTT from the 5211 RTT Natural History Study (RNHS) (November 2015–July 2021). Pharmacological and supportive therapy use, RTT-related outcomes, and RTT severity, as measured by the Clinical Severity Scale and Motor Behavioral Assessment scale, were evaluated following the first RNHS visit. Analyses were conducted overall and in subgroups by RTT type (classic and atypical RTT) and age at first visit (pediatric and adult).ResultsA total of 455 females with RTT were included in the study, of whom 90.5% had classic RTT and 79.8% were pediatric individuals. Over a median follow-up of 4 years, use of pharmacological therapies, including prokinetic agents (42.7% vs. 28.3%), and supportive therapies, including physical therapy (87.3% vs. 40.2%) and speech-language therapy (86.8% vs. 23.9%), were more common in pediatric than adult individuals (all p < 0.05). Nearly half (44.6%) of all individuals had a hospital or emergency room visit, with a higher proportion of visits in individuals with classic RTT than atypical RTT and pediatric than adult individuals (both p = 0.001). An increasing trend in clinical severity was observed in pediatric individuals (mean change per year: 0.24; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.03, 0.44), while an increasing trend in motor-behavioral dysfunction was observed in pediatric individuals (mean change per year: 1.12; 95% CI: 0.63, 1.60) and those with classic RTT (mean change per year: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.53, 1.41).ConclusionsFindings from this study highlight the considerable burden of RTT across disease subtype and age. Despite reliance on supportive therapies and healthcare encounters, individuals with RTT experience increasing disease severity and motor-behavioral dysfunction in childhood and adolescence, underscoring the unmet needs of this population and the value of early intervention to manage RTT in the long-term.
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