Brandi Maria Luisa, Carpenter Thomas O, Fukumoto Seiji, Haffner Dieter, Imel Erik A, Kanematsu Masanori, McCullough Keith P, Ozono Keiichi
Fondazione Italiana Ricerca sulle Malattie dell'Osso (FIRMO), Florence, Italy.
Department of Pediatrics, Section of Endocrinology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2025 Apr 7;16:1471127. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1471127. eCollection 2025.
X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) is a rare, genetic, progressive, lifelong disorder caused by pathogenic variants in the gene, resulting in excess fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) and consequent renal phosphate wasting. Chronic hypophosphatemia leads to deficits of the musculoskeletal system affecting bone, muscle, joint, and dental health. XLH treatments include oral phosphate and active vitamin D-which are associated with a burdensome dosing regimen, gastrointestinal disturbances, hyperparathyroidism, and nephrocalcinosis-or burosumab, a fully human anti-FGF23 antibody. Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) demonstrated burosumab to be well tolerated and efficacious in improving serum phosphate, rickets, bone turnover, and patient-reported outcomes. However, there are limited data on the natural history of XLH or real-world comparisons of the safety, effectiveness, and long-term outcomes of XLH treatments. Advancing Patient Evidence in XLH (APEX) is a global data unification project aiming to describe the burden and lifelong progression of XLH, collect real-world data on treatment effectiveness and safety, and investigate regional differences in treatment outcomes. Participants from three observational, noninterventional, retrospective and prospective, multicenter, longitudinal (10-year) studies of patients with XLH will be included: XLH Disease Monitoring Program (NCT03651505), International XLH Registry (NCT03193476), and SUNFLOWER (NCT03745521). Data collected in the Americas, Europe, Israel, Japan, and South Korea will be processed to unify identical and similar data elements. Data unification will be an iterative process with a clinical and programming review, ensuring validity and accuracy. In this observational study, unified data involving approximately 2000 pediatric and adult participants with XLH will be analyzed to address research questions in an exploratory manner. Long-term observational studies and patient registries provide opportunities to generate real-world data and address knowledge gaps in rare diseases. APEX aims to improve clinical decision-making and practice by bridging evidence gaps that cannot be addressed by RCTs or regional registries.
X连锁低磷血症(XLH)是一种罕见的、遗传性、进行性的终身疾病,由该基因的致病变异引起,导致成纤维细胞生长因子23(FGF23)过多,进而导致肾脏磷酸盐流失。慢性低磷血症会导致肌肉骨骼系统出现缺陷,影响骨骼、肌肉、关节和牙齿健康。XLH的治疗方法包括口服磷酸盐和活性维生素D(这与繁琐的给药方案、胃肠道紊乱、甲状旁腺功能亢进和肾钙质沉着症有关),或布罗索尤单抗(一种全人源抗FGF23抗体)。随机临床试验(RCT)表明,布罗索尤单抗耐受性良好,在改善血清磷酸盐水平、佝偻病、骨转换和患者报告的结局方面有效。然而,关于XLH自然病史的数据有限,或者关于XLH治疗安全性、有效性和长期结局的真实世界比较的数据有限。推进XLH患者证据(APEX)是一个全球数据统一项目,旨在描述XLH的负担和终身进展,收集治疗有效性和安全性的真实世界数据,并调查治疗结局的区域差异。将纳入三项对XLH患者进行的观察性、非干预性、回顾性和前瞻性、多中心、纵向(10年)研究的参与者:XLH疾病监测项目(NCT03651505)、国际XLH注册中心(NCT03193476)和向日葵研究(NCT03745521)。在美洲、欧洲、以色列、日本和韩国收集的数据将进行处理,以统一相同和相似的数据元素。数据统一将是一个经过临床和编程审查的迭代过程,以确保有效性和准确性。在这项观察性研究中,将对涉及约2000名患有XLH的儿科和成人参与者的统一数据进行分析,以探索性方式解决研究问题。长期观察性研究和患者注册中心为生成真实世界数据和填补罕见病知识空白提供了机会。APEX旨在通过弥合RCT或区域注册中心无法解决的证据差距来改善临床决策和实践。