|
Dear Pediatrician: Patients with Fabry Disease are often first diagnosed
in a pediatricians office when children present with episodic
pain crisis in the extremities, paresthesia, recurrent fever and
red spots behind the ears or angiokeratoma. The symptoms may be
caused by deposition of a glycolipid, globotriaosylceramide, that
cannot be degraded due to an enzymatic defect in the lysosomal
enzyme alphagalactosidase A, the cause of Fabry disease.
This disease follows an X-linked inheritance, so your male patients
are homozygotes, while female heterozygotes usually exhibit mild
or no symptoms. In the early stages, your patients other
complaints may be growth retardation, hypohidrosis and heat and
cold intolerance. Delayed puberty, gastrointestinal distress and
diarrhea occur in adolescence and early adulthood. Enzyme replacement therapy is now available to prevent the progression to heart and kidney damage, stroke and untimely death, and provide relief for early symptoms. The FDA has approved the therapy for treatment of patients. Your patients are eligible for TESTING. If their diagnosis is confirmed by a simple test of alpha-galactosidase activity in their blood sample, they can be evaluated for treatment. We would like to solicit your help in identifying patients with Fabry disease. Please check your charts for patients displaying the above-mentioned symptoms, and then send them a letter informing them of the availability of testing. Enclosed please find a draft of that type of letter providing the relevant information on how to obtain a testing kit that maybe used in any physicians office. You may copy this letter onto your letterhead and modify it in any way you feel is appropriate. It will be the patients decision to follow up on this letter, but we would appreciate your encouragement. Enzyme replacement therapy for a similar disease, Gauchers disease, is one of the most successful applications of modern science and has helped many patients to lead normal lives without the pain and complications of that disease. We hope to provide similar relief to patients with Fabry disease by replacing the missing alpha-galactosidase enzyme. Their lives may depend on it. We thank you for your efforts and cooperation, and we are certain your patients will, too.
Dear Pediatrician Patient Draft |
| Copyright © 2002 |