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Clinical Nephrology |
Therapy in Patients with Fabry Disease









* Assistance PubliqueHôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France;
Department of Renal Medicine, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, United Kingdom;
Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York;
Nephrology Division, Department of Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York; || Division of Genetics, Birth Defects, and Metabolism, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois; ¶ Charles Dent Metabolic Unit, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, United Kingdom; ** Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Iowa Hospital & Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa; 
Department of Internal Medicine, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Academisch Medisch Centrum, Amsterdam, Netherlands; 
Genzyme Corp., Cambridge, Massachusetts; 
Genetics Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California; and |||| Hôpital Edouard Herriot, Lyon, France
Address correspondence to: Dr. Dominique P. Germain, Centre de Référence de la Maladie de Fabry et des Maladies Héréditaires du Tissu Conjonctif, Assistance PubliqueHôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France. Phone: +33-1-56-09-23-06; Fax: +33-1-56-09-24-80; E-mail: dominique.germain{at}egp.aphp.fr
Received for publication August 2, 2006. Accepted for publication February 21, 2007.
| Abstract |
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-galactosidase A, causes progressive intralysosomal accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (GL-3) and premature death from renal, cardiac, and cerebrovascular manifestations. To determine the long-term safety and efficacy of recombinant human
-galactosidase A, an open-label, phase III extension study was conducted, involving 58 patients who had classic Fabry disease and completed a 20-wk, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, phase III study of agalsidase
and were transitioned to an extension trial to receive biweekly 1 mg/kg agalsidase
for up to an additional 54 mo. GL-3 accumulation was evaluated in the capillary endothelia of the skin, kidney, and heart. Renal function was assessed. By month 54, all patients with optional kidney biopsies (n = 8) maintained complete GL-3 clearance in renal capillary endothelial cells and multiple cell types. Continued, complete clearance of skin (31 of 36) and heart (six of eight) capillary endothelium was demonstrated. Mean plasma GL-3 levels remained decreased in the normal range. Median serum creatinine and estimated GFR remained stable (normal) in patients with renal data at month 54 (n = 41). Six patients had renal disease progression; most (four of six) were older than 40 yr and had significant proteinuria at baseline and evidence of sclerotic glomeruli pretreatment. Adverse events were generally mild and unrelated to treatment. The most common treatment-related adverse events were infusion-associated reactions, which decreased over time. Long-term agalsidase
therapy stabilizes renal function in patients without renal involvement at baseline, maintains reduction of plasma GL-3, and sustains GL-3 clearance in capillary endothelial cells and multiple renal cell types. | Introduction |
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-galactosidase A (
-GalA), leading to deficient activity of this enzyme. The disease is characterized by a progressive pathologic accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (GL-3) and related glycosphingolipids in the plasma and various cell types (13). Male individuals are primarily affected, but female heterozygotes may display moderate or severe disease, which is likely related to the pattern of X-chromosome inactivation (35). There is a wide spectrum of Fabry disease severity, and clinical manifestations become more severe as glycosphingolipid deposition increases over time. Patients develop progressive renal disease, cardiac disease, and cerebrovascular disease (3), which lead to high morbidity and premature mortality (1).
Until the development of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), Fabry disease was treated primarily with supportive measures (6). In an open-label phase I/II trial, treatment with agalsidase
rapidly and markedly cleared GL-3 deposits from the major sites of classical Fabry pathology, namely the vascular endothelium of the kidney, liver, heart, and skin (7). A randomized, placebo-controlled pivotal phase III trial subsequently confirmed the safety and the efficacy of 1.0 mg/kg agalsidase
administered every 2 wk for a total of 20 wk (8). By study end, GL-3 clearance from the capillary endothelial cells of the kidney, heart, and skin was significantly greater in patients who received agalsidase
versus placebo (P < 0.001), and plasma GL-3 (determined by ELISA) was reduced to undetectable levels in patients who were treated with agalsidase
(8).
Short-term clinical trials have relied on surrogate markers to indicate efficacy because later-stage complications develop gradually over an extended period of time. However, the long-term goal of ERT is to prevent, stabilize, or slow progression of Fabry pathology. To investigate the long-term safety and efficacy of agalsidase
therapy, all 58 patients from the double-blind, 20-wk study entered an open-label extension trial in which they received biweekly 1.0 mg/kg agalsidase
infusions for up to an additional 54 mo. This represents the longest study of patients who had Fabry disease and received a therapy targeted specifically to their disease. Interim evaluation after 30 mo demonstrated that agalsidase
treatment was associated with sustained capillary endothelial GL-3 clearance in skin biopsies, sustained reduction to normal levels of plasma GL-3, and stable serum creatinine and estimated GFR (eGFR) (9). Here, we report the final safety and efficacy findings of this open-label extension study after 54 mo of therapy.
| Materials and Methods |
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Study Design
This was an open-label extension trial with no placebo treatment (registration NCT00074971, clinicaltrials.gov) (Figure 1). Patients had previously participated in a placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of agalsidase
(1 mg/kg every 2 wk) or placebo for 20 wk. All patients in the extension study received 1 mg/kg (0.9 to 1.1 mg/kg) agalsidase
every 2 wk for up to an additional 54 mo, with the exception of one patient, whose dose was increased to 3 mg/kg because of worsening renal function. Before infusion, all patients received acetaminophen 975 to 1000 mg. A few patients received pretreatment with an antihistamine and/or ibuprofen to minimize infusion-associated reactions (IAR). Beginning infusion rates (
0.25 mg/min [15 mg/h]) were increased as tolerated to a minimum infusion time of 90 min.
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Biochemical evaluations that consisted of mass spectrometric quantification of GL-3 in the plasma have been described (9). Renal function was assessed by serum creatinine testing and eGFR (9) calculated by the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease Study equation (12). Proteinuria was defined as the ratio of urine protein to urine creatinine.
Serum samples for recombinant human
-GalA (rh-
GalA) IgG antibody testing were initially collected every 2 wk before study drug infusion. After month 24, serum samples were collected at every other visit, and after month 36, serum samples were collected every 6 mo. Detailed analytical methods have been published (9).
Concomitant medications that were taken during the study, including pain medications and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEI)/angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARB), were recorded using the World Health Organization Drug Dictionary (13).
Histologic Assessment
Histologic evaluations of kidney, heart, and skin tissues were performed during the extension study by a total of nine independent pathologists (three each for renal, cardiac, and skin evaluations) who were blinded to initial treatment group.
Skin biopsies were collected at 6, 12, 18 (optional), 30, 42, and 54 mo. Histologic evaluations of the capillary endothelium of the skin were conducted using light microscopy (LM) to determine accumulation of GL-3. Histologic evaluation of the capillary endothelium of the heart and kidney for GL-3 accumulation was conducted at month 6 (or month 12, if the month 6 biopsy was postponed) and optionally at month 54, if deemed medically appropriate, using LM. Other cell types from the kidney (14,15) were also evaluated using LM.
The degree of GL-3 deposition was rated using an ordinal scale as reported previously (8,14). GL-3 accumulation in podocytes and distal convoluted tubule/collecting ducts was assessed at month 6 and scored relative to baseline values; at month 54, the ordinal scoring system was used. The number of glomeruli, the number of globally sclerotic glomeruli, and the number of glomeruli with FSGS were recorded. The percentage of sclerotic glomeruli was calculated as follows: Number of globally sclerotic glomeruli + number of glomeruli with FSGS divided by the number of evaluable glomeruli.
Statistical Analyses
Data during the extension study were combined with the original double-blind study to show how scores changed from baseline to month 54/final study visit. Baseline refers to entry into the double-blind study. Comparisons were made to pretreatment values which were (1) at entry into the double-blind study for patients who received agalsidase
during the double-blind study and extension study and (2) at entry into the extension study for patients who were originally in the placebo group of the double-blind study. All statistical comparisons were carried out as two-tailed tests. The "as treated" patients included all patients according to the treatment they actually received for the majority of their infusions in the double-blind trial and had at least one infusion in the extension study.
Efficacy and safety end-point analyses were conducted on the "as treated" population. One-sample t tests were conducted to test for significant differences from zero in mean changes in mean GL-3 scores, eGFR, serum creatinine, Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire scores, SF-36 scores, and proteinuria within each treatment group.
Medians and quartiles for eGFR at each data collection time point were calculated for subgroups of patients. Patients were subgrouped on the basis of baseline proteinuria (
1 and >1 g/24 h) as well as by percentage of sclerotic glomeruli at pretreatment (
50 and <50%). GFR slopes over time on the basis of these two subgroups of patients were estimated by mixed-effect models using random effects to determine an intercept and GFR slope over time for each patient. Logistic regression was used to determine the probability of a renal event (defined as having a >50% increase in serum creatinine over the pretreatment assessment and the increased value >1.4 mg/dl) on the basis of baseline proteinuria and percentage of pretreatment sclerotic glomeruli.
| Results |
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. An autopsy revealed severe heart disease consistent with Fabry disease. A 46-yr-old man who received agalsidase
for 60 mo experienced a urinary tract infection and sepsis that led to death. Of the four patients who were withdrawn per protocol as a result of IgE antibody development or skin testing criteria, three had positive skin tests but negative IgE sera tests. All four patients were able to continue agalsidase
therapy either in a separate rechallenge protocol or in the commercial setting.
The mean duration of treatment for all patients was 52.2 mo. Despite the long-term nature of this study, relatively few infusions were missed by patients who completed the study (n = 44). The majority (84%) of patients received at least 90% of their possible infusions. Four patients missed
20% infusions. All patients were included in the safety and efficacy analyses.
At the beginning of the study, initial infusions ranged from 4 to 6 h to preserve the study blind. However, by month 54, the mean infusion time for all patients who received full infusions was 2.5 h ± 36.5 min. The majority (72%) received most of their infusions in
2.5 h, and 48% of patients received the majority of their infusions in
2.0 h.
Eleven patients received home infusion, which were generally well tolerated. For reasons unrelated to agalsidase
treatment, one patient needed to return to study site infusions after eight successful home infusions. Two patients had mild IAR after beginning home infusion (one experienced vomiting, the other experienced rigors).
Among the 23 patients who received ACEI/ARB therapy during the study, mean (SD) baseline proteinuria was 0.82 (0.97) g/24 h and remained unchanged at the end of the study. Mean (SD) pretreatment and end-of-study systolic BP (SBP)/diastolic BP (DBP) values among these patients were 129 (14)/72 (10) and 124 (14)/72 (11), respectively.
GL-3 Clearance
Pretreatment histologic evaluations of renal, cardiac, and skin biopsies revealed substantial deposits of GL-3 in microvascular endothelial cells (8).
Kidney.
Kidney biopsies were obtained from 49 patients 6 mo after entry into the extension study (month 6) and from eight patients at month 54 of the extension study. At month 6, nearly all (47 of 49) patients achieved a score of 0, indicating GL-3 clearance from the renal interstitial capillary endothelial cells (8). By month 54, all (eight of eight) patients had capillary endothelial cell scores of 0 (Figure 2).
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Heart.
The majority (32 of 40) of evaluable patients had nearly complete clearance of GL-3 from the cardiac capillary endothelium (i.e., score = 0) at month 6 (Figure 2). Similar results were achieved for the limited number of patients with optional biopsies at month 54, when six of eight patients achieved a score of 0. The remaining two patients had scores of 1 (mild) at month 54; neither patient experienced a cardiac SAE during the study.
Skin.
Skin biopsies were assessed for continued GL-3 clearance from 36 patients at month 54, and 31 (86%) patients demonstrated complete clearance of GL-3 (Figure 2). The five patients with nonzero scores at month 54 had a score of 1 compared with higher pretreatment scores of 2 (n = 3) and 3 (n = 2). These patients had normal plasma GL-3 levels at month 54 and showed a downward trend in IgG antibody titers. None of the patients had renal disease progression; one patient with kidney biopsy at month 54 demonstrated complete GL-3 clearance of renal capillary endothelial cells.
Plasma GL-3.
Mean plasma GL-3 levels showed a decrease to normal levels (
7.03 µg/ml) within 6 mo of treatment with agalsidase
(9), and mean plasma GL-3 levels remained normal through month 54 in both groups (data not shown).
Long-Term Treatment with Agalsidase
Stabilizes Renal Disease Progression in Patients with Fabry Disease
Median serum creatinine remained stable and normal throughout the 54-mo treatment period; however, a rise in mean serum creatinine was observed between months 36 and 54, which can be attributed to the renal disease progression of six patients (data not shown). The eGFR slopes for each patient with renal progression were 3.5, 4.7, 6.0, 8.2, 9.9, and 12.1 ml/min per 1.73 m2/yr. The mean rate of eGFR decline for the remaining patients (n = 52) as a group was 0.4 ml/min per 1.73 m2/yr and not significantly different from 0 (P = 0.6785).
Patients who demonstrated renal progression during the trial shared a common clinical profile, including age >40 yr (four of six), significant baseline proteinuria (>2 g/24 h; four of six), and >50% glomerular sclerosis at pretreatment (four of four). One of these patients missed 39% of his infusions, which could have contributed further to his renal disease progression. Five of the six patients received ACEI/ARB therapy during the trial. Mean (SD) pretreatment and end-of-study SBP/DBP values among these six patients were 128 (9)/74 (7) and 131 (22)/78 (10), respectively.
At entry into the extension study, median eGFR was normal and remained stable through month 54 (Figure 5). Ten patients had reduced eGFR (<90 ml/min per 1.73 m2) at baseline. Of these, six patients had either stabilization (eGFR ± 20%) or improvement in eGFR at the end of the study.
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1 g/24 h) proteinuria at baseline. The mean rate of decline in eGFR for patients with high baseline proteinuria was 7.4 ml/min per 1.73 m2/yr (SEM 1.9), which was significantly different from 0 (P = 0.0003; Figure 6A). In contrast, patients (n = 42) with low (
1 g/24 h) proteinuria at baseline showed a mean (SEM) eGFR slope of 1.0 ml/min per 1.73 m2/yr (1.0; P = 0.3052). Similarly, patients (n = 8) with pretreatment glomerulosclerosis
50% revealed a higher rate of decline in eGFR (8.9 ml/min per 1.73 m2/yr; P = 0.0001) during the course of the study compared with patients (n = 32) with <50% glomerulosclerosis at pretreatment (1.4 ml/min per 1.73 m2/yr; P = 0.2039; Figure 7A). The risk for renal events also increased with higher baseline proteinuria (Figure 6B) and the degree of pretreatment glomerulosclerosis (Figure 7B).
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50% received some ACEI/ARB therapy during the course of the study. Some of these patients had a decrease in their proteinuria values during the course of the study, whereas others had increased or unchanged values. Proteinuria values did not change substantially during the course of treatment for the whole population.
Improvement in Pain and Quality of Life for Treated Patients with Fabry Disease
Pain scores, as measured by the McGill Pain Questionnaire, improved over time for those who reported pain at pretreatment (score >0). Among these patients, present pain intensity improved from a mean overall score of 1.56 at pretreatment to 0.93 at month 54 (P = 0.016). A statistically significant improvement in mean visual analog scale scores at month 54 was also observed for these patients (P = 0.007).
For most SF-36 components, patients experienced a mean improvement after long-term treatment with agalsidase
. The mean changes from pretreatment through month 54 for the components of Physical Functioning, Role Emotional, Body Pain, and Standardized Physical Component Scale (for patients with score <100 at first measurement before treatment) were statistically significant (P = 0.015, 0.031, 0.003, and 0.006, respectively). Small improvements were observed for the other components, although none reached statistical significance.
Safety
All 58 patients experienced at least one AE since the beginning of treatment with agalsidase
. Most AE were mild and unrelated to treatment. The most common related AE were IAR, consisting of rigors, temperature, changed sensation, fever, nausea, headache, vomiting, flushing, chest pain, rhinitis, pruritus, tremor, dyspnea, somnolence, and acroparesthesia (Table 3). Most IAR were assessed as mild, and the total number of patients who experienced IAR markedly decreased over time. Eight patients experienced a total of 15 related SAE, and the events in three of these patients were considered severe. In many cases, the SAE were IAR, including tachycardia, hypertension, urticaria, chest pain, fever, and rigors.
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IgG Antibody Levels
Overall, 52 (90%) of 58 patients seroconverted. The majority of patients seroconverted within the first 3 mo of receiving agalsidase
. Of these patients, one patient was assessed a "low responder" (IgG titers not exceeding 800), 32 patients demonstrated a downward trend in titers based on a four-fold or more reduction in titer from the peak measurement to the last measurement, nine patients demonstrated a plateau in their antibody titers, and nine patients tolerized (no detectable IgG antibodies determined by ELISA and two consecutive negative confirmatory radioimmunoprecipitation assays). Of the two female patients enrolled, one patient tolerized and the other patient remained seronegative. The frequency of IAR increased in parallel with the seroconversion rate but then decreased over time (Figure 8). All eight patients with kidney biopsies at month 54 demonstrated GL-3 clearance, despite that seven of eight developed IgG antibodies against rh-
GalA. The peak antibody titers for patients who had renal progression were similar to those of patients who did not progress.
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| Discussion |
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stabilizes renal disease progression in patients with Fabry disease.
After 54 mo of treatment with agalsidase
, median eGFR, proteinuria, and serum creatinine remained stable and normal. Six patients had renal disease progression despite effective substrate clearance with agalsidase
, including three patients who were previously identified at 36 mo (9). These patients shared common baseline characteristics that might have predisposed them to renal progression. Most were older than 40 yr, which is associated with increased risk for renal disease progression in patients with Fabry disease (16,17). The mean pretreatment and final SBP/DBP values were not substantially different, suggesting that BP did not contribute to renal progression.
Other factors that were common among these six patients with renal progression included high pretreatment glomerulosclerosis and high baseline proteinuria, which indicated extensive renal involvement despite near-normal serum creatinine at baseline. It is possible that the presence of extensive glomerulosclerosis or high proteinuria before ERT initiation could be used to predict renal outcome. Subgroup analyses involving the entire evaluable study population explored this possibility. The findings suggest that significant renal involvement at pretreatment increases the likelihood for renal progression over time and is predictive of renal events, underscoring the importance of a comprehensive assessment of renal disease before initiating ERT.
Importantly, these analyses also suggest that patients who do not exhibit evidence of extensive glomerulosclerosis by renal biopsy and heavy proteinuria at baseline can achieve effective stabilization of renal function with agalsidase
. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of agalsidase
in patients who had Fabry disease with more advanced renal disease was recently reported (18). This study demonstrated clinical benefit by slowing the rate of renal, cardiac, and cerebrovascular events.
Clinical outcome findings confirmed histologic evaluations of sustained GL-3 clearance. By month 54, kidney capillary endothelium continued to show complete clearance of GL-3 deposition. Persistent clearance of GL-3 in noncapillary vascular endothelium, glomerular capillary endothelium, and mesangial cells was also observed. Importantly, podocytes and distal convoluted tubule/collecting duct cells, which are laden with GL-3 deposits, also showed improvement or clearance of GL-3 stores, respectively, suggesting that exogenous enzyme gains access to and is effective in these sites over time.
Long-term GL-3 clearance was also shown in cardiac and skin capillary endothelial cells. Mean plasma GL-3 levels rapidly reduced within months of initiation of agalsidase
therapy and remained normal throughout the 54-mo open-label period. Collectively, these results indicate that long-term therapy with agalsidase
maintains GL-3 clearance achieved with short-term treatment and that continued treatment begins to reduce existing stores of GL-3 substrate in other cell types that are challenging to treat.
As we noted, median proteinuria values remained unchanged through the study. Some of the patients, particularly those with heavy proteinuria or advanced glomerulosclerosis, received ACEI/ARB therapy at the investigators discretion; however, the effect on proteinuria was variable. It is possible that some of these patients whose values continued to increase or remained unchanged could have had a decrease in their proteinuria values with aggressive intervention with ACEI/ARB therapy. The study was not designed to address this question, so no meaningful conclusions can be made.
A limitation of this study is the lack of a parallel control group. However, relative to patients who have Fabry disease and receive only symptomatic care, patients who receive agalsidase
therapy seem less likely to have renal disease progression. For example, in a study by Branton et al. (15) that followed the clinical course of 105 male patients with Fabry disease, 39 (37%) patients developed chronic renal insufficiency (CRI). Furthermore, the rate of decline in GFR for 14 of these patients averaged 12.2 ± 8.1 ml/min per yr once CRI had developed (15). In this study, median serum creatinine and median eGFR remained stable during the 54-mo agalsidase
treatment period. It should be recognized that the patients who received agalsidase
were, on average, younger and had less advanced renal disease than those in the Branton study who developed CRI. Follow-up of the long-term effects of agalsidase
treatment in this cohort of patients will provide additional insight into the progression of renal disease.
Scores on the McGill Pain Questionnaire were low at pretreatment, possibly as a result of unrestricted use of pain medications. Nevertheless, scores improved over time with agalsidase
treatment among patients who reported pain/difficulty at pretreatment, and intermittent reduction and/or cessation of pain medication use was noted for some patients. Together with data demonstrating significant improvement in several SF-36 components among patients with pretreatment scores <100, these results suggest that agalsidase
treatment had a positive effect on patient quality of life.
Agalsidase
treatment was well tolerated. IAR were the most common treatment-related AE, which decreased over time. A total of five (9%) patients experienced a symptomatic stroke or a transient ischemic attack during treatment with agalsidase
. Although most patients seroconverted by month 54, IgG antibody titers were independent of response to 1 mg/kg agalsidase
therapy, as evidenced by long-term renal stabilization, continued reduction in histologic scores for cellular clearance of GL-3, and sustained normal mean plasma levels of GL-3. The majority of seroconverted patients demonstrated a four-fold or more reduction in antibody titer from peak measurement to the last measurement, and 17% (nine of 52) of patients tolerized. Testing for in vitro inhibitory activity was performed on all IgG-positive patients who participated in this study. The clinical significance of in vitro inhibitory activity and its relationship to plasma GL-3 levels in these patients who received agalsidase
treatment is unclear. On the basis of the limited available data, there does not seem to be a correlation among IgG antibody titers, plasma GL-3 levels, and the patients clinical status. The clinical relevance of in vitro inhibitory activity results among patients who were treated with agalsidase
remains unknown.
During the course of the 54-mo study, patients were able to tolerate higher infusion rates and achieve shorter infusion times. In fact, many patients were successfully and conveniently infused in the home. By study end, the mean infusion time for all patients who received full infusions was reduced from the initial rate of 4 to 6 h down to approximately 2.5 h.
| Conclusion |
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efficacy in GL-3 clearance from kidney, heart, skin, and plasma. Early and continued intervention with agalsidase
preserves renal function, as measured by serum creatinine and eGFR, and seems to retard renal disease progression. Further investigations should include determining the long-term efficacy of agalsidase
therapy on cardiac and cerebrovascular manifestations. | Disclosures |
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| Acknowledgments |
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In addition to the authors, the following members of the Fabry Study Group participated in the study: M. Leary (Boston, MA), G. Cohen (Baltimore, MD), P. Cochat (Lyon, France), M. Azizi, K. Benistan (Paris, France), P. Mathew (Albuquerque, NM), S. Packman (San Francisco, CA), C.R. Scott (Seattle, WA), R.E. Hart (Hickory, NC), D. Jackson (Billings, MT), R. Lyons (San Antonio, TX), N. Weinreb (Coral Springs, FL), F.M. Joglar (San Juan, PR), C. Hollak (Amsterdam, Netherlands), A. Macklin (Dorset, UK), G. Mourad (Montpellier, France), B. Dussol (Marseille, France), P. Le Pogamp (Rennes, France), C. Combe (Bordeaux, France), G. Piszker (Paray-Le-Monial, France), A. Goldstein (Le Mans, France), N. Brion (Aubervilliers, France), B. Richalet (Saint-Lô, France), F. Stewart (Belfast, Ireland, UK), O. Chabre, P.S. Jouk (Grenoble, France), and B. Bénichou, T. Brengola, M.M. Kaper, D. Mackey, S. Richards, B. Thurberg, and S. Walbillic (Genzyme Corp., Cambridge, MA).
We thank the patients and study personnel who participated in the study. We also thank Dianne Barry, PhD, for writing assistance.
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D.P.G. and S.W. contributed equally to this work.
M.B.'s current affiliation is Department of Neurology and Pediatrics, New York University, New York, New York.
See the related editorial, "Enzyme Replacement Therapy and Fabry Kidney Disease: Quo Vadis?" on pages 13681370.
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