Abstract

BackgroundTwenty-five patients with Niemann Pick disease type C (age range: 7 months to 44 years) were enrolled in an Italian independent multicenter trial and treated with miglustat for periods from 48 to 96 months.MethodsBased on the age at onset of neurological manifestations patients’ phenotypes were classified as: adult (n = 6), juvenile (n = 9), late infantile (n = 6), early infantile (n = 2). Two patients had an exclusively visceral phenotype. We clinically evaluated patients’ neurological involvement, giving a score of severity ranging from 0 (best) to 3 (worst) for gait abnormalities, dystonia, dysmetria, dysarthria, and developmental delay/cognitive impairment, and from 0 to 4 for dysphagia. We calculated a mean composite severity score transforming the original scores proportionally to range from 0 to 1 to summarize the clinical picture of patients and monitor their clinical course.ResultsWe compared the results after 24 months of treatment in 23 patients showing neurological manifestations. Stabilization or improvement of all parameters was observed in the majority of patients. With the exception of developmental delay/cognitive impairment, these results persisted after 48–96 months in 41 – 55% of the patients (dystonia: 55%, dysarthria: 50%, gait abnormalities: 43%, dysmetria: 41%, respectively). After 24 months of therapy the majority of the evaluable patients (n = 20), demonstrated a stabilization or improvement in the ability to swallow four substances of different consistency (water: 65%, purée: 58%, little pasta: 60%, biscuit: 55%). These results persisted after 48–96 months in 40-50% of patients, with the exception of water swallowing. Stabilization or improvement of the composite severity score was detected in the majority (57%) of 7 patients who were treated early (within 3.5 years from onset) and rarely in patients who received treatment later.ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest that miglustat treatment can improve or stabilize neurological manifestations, at least for a period of time; the severity of clinical conditions at the beginning of treatment can influence the rate of disease progression. This conclusion applies particularly to patients with juvenile or adult onset of the disease.Trial registrationEudraCT number 2006-005842-35Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13023-015-0240-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Twenty-five patients with Niemann Pick disease type C were enrolled in an Italian independent multicenter trial and treated with miglustat for periods from 48 to 96 months

  • We report the results of an independent multicenter clinical trial of miglustat treatment in Italian patients, carried out from 2007 to 2009, before the drug was approved in Europe, and from long-term follow-up, lasting up to 48–96 months

  • Severity scores: distribution at baseline and change after treatment Severity score for each parameter was assessed at baseline in 23 patients with neurological manifestations

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Summary

Introduction

Twenty-five patients with Niemann Pick disease type C (age range: 7 months to 44 years) were enrolled in an Italian independent multicenter trial and treated with miglustat for periods from 48 to 96 months. Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a lysosomal lipidstorage disorder, with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance, characterized by defective intracellular lipid trafficking, and secondary accumulation of free cholesterol, sphingosine and glycosphingolipids in the lysosomelate endosome compartment of different tissues and organs. NPC is clinically characterized by a wide spectrum of visceral and neurological signs and symptoms, with variable age of onset [1]. NPC disease has been classified in many phenotypes based on the patient’s age of onset, independently from whether the first signs were visceral or neurological [1]. Categorization of patients has been based on the age at onset of the first neurological sign [2]

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