Stargardt disease: monitoring incidence and diagnostic trends in the Netherlands using a nationwide disease registry

Purpose: To assess the incidence of Stargardt disease (STGD1) and to evaluate demographics of incident cases. Methods: For this retrospective cohort study, demographic, clinical and genetic data of patients with a clinical diagnosis of STGD1 were registered between September 2010 and January 2020 in a nationwide disease registry. Annual incidence (2014-2018) and point prevalence (2018) were assessed on the basis of this registry. Results: A total of 800 patients were registered, 56% were female and 83% were of European ancestry. The incidence was 1.67-1.95:1,000,000 per year and the point prev... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Runhart, Esmee H.
Dhooge, Patty
Meester-Smoor, Magda
Pas, Jeroen
Pott, Jan Willem R.
van Leeuwen, Redmer
Kroes, Hester Y.
Bergen, Arthur A.
de Jong-Hesse, Yvonne
Thiadens, Alberta A.
van Schooneveld, Mary J.
van Genderen, Maria
Boon, Camiel
Klaver, Caroline
van den Born, L. Ingeborg
Cremers, Frans P.M.
Hoyng, Carel B.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Schlagwörter: ABCA4 / incidence / prevalence / Stargardt Disease / STGD1 / Ophthalmology
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29203706
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/443498

Purpose: To assess the incidence of Stargardt disease (STGD1) and to evaluate demographics of incident cases. Methods: For this retrospective cohort study, demographic, clinical and genetic data of patients with a clinical diagnosis of STGD1 were registered between September 2010 and January 2020 in a nationwide disease registry. Annual incidence (2014-2018) and point prevalence (2018) were assessed on the basis of this registry. Results: A total of 800 patients were registered, 56% were female and 83% were of European ancestry. The incidence was 1.67-1.95:1,000,000 per year and the point prevalence in 2018 was approximately 1:22,000-1:19,000 (with and without 10% of potentially unregistered cases). Age at onset was associated with sex (p = 0.027, Fisher’s exact); 1.9x more women than men were observed (140 versus 74) amongst patients with an age at onset between 10 and 19 years, while the sex ratio in other age-at-onset categories approximated one. Late-onset STGD1 (≥45 years) constituted 33% of the diagnoses in 2014-2018 compared to 19% in 2004-2008. Diagnostic delay (≥2 years between the first documentation of macular abnormalities and diagnosis) was associated with older age of onset (p = 0.001, Mann–Whitney). Misdiagnosis for age-related macular degeneration (22%) and incidental STGD1 findings (14%) was common in patients with late-onset STGD1. Conclusion: The observed prevalence of STGD1 in real-world data was lower than expected on the basis of population ABCA4 allele frequencies. Late-onset STGD1 was more frequently diagnosed in recent years, likely due to higher awareness of its phenotype. In this pretherapeutic era, mis- and underdiagnosis of especially late-onset STGD1 and the role of sex in STGD1 should receive special attention.