Chehowah Carole, Mittelman Audrey, des Portes Vincent
Association Xtraordinaire, Paris, France.
Creatine Transporter Deficiency Commission, Paris, France.
Front Neurosci. 2025 Jul 7;19:1620586. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2025.1620586. eCollection 2025.
Over the last 15 years, significant progress has been made for Creatine Transporter Deficiency (CTD) patients, with increased awareness and visibility, better diagnosis, and improved care. Research projects have paved the way for clinical trials on the horizon. However, girls with CTD have been overlooked. Because they are considered a negligible cohort with less serious symptoms compared to males, girls with rare X-linked disorders have never been a priority for diagnosis and research. This results in underdiagnosis, systematic exclusion from clinical studies, and a considerable impact on the development of female patients. As a patient association, Xtraordinaire aims to counter these beliefs and to show that females deserve as much attention as males. Our first initiative identified girls with CTD within our community and led to the development of an international questionnaire to collect more specific data in this population. Of the 22 families who completed the questionnaire, the delay between symptom onset (mean age 1.8 years) and diagnosis (mean age 11.8 years) highlighted the difficulty of diagnosis for girls, often given several wavering diagnoses before reaching a CTD diagnosis. Almost half of families (47%) had difficulties securing a specialist appointment. Our questionnaire emphasized that girls with CTD have identical symptoms to males and similar delays in development milestones. These data have generated interest, and researchers have started to include girls in their studies. We strongly believe that upcoming studies on females will enrich our knowledge, further our understanding of CTD, help better diagnose girls, and develop adapted treatments.
在过去的15年里,肌酸转运体缺乏症(CTD)患者取得了显著进展,人们对该病的认识和关注度提高,诊断方法得到改进,护理水平也有所提升。研究项目为即将开展的临床试验铺平了道路。然而,患有CTD的女孩一直被忽视。由于与男性相比,她们被认为是症状较轻、可以忽略不计的群体,患有罕见X连锁疾病的女孩从未成为诊断和研究的重点对象。这导致诊断不足、被系统地排除在临床研究之外,并对女性患者的发育产生了相当大的影响。作为一个患者组织,非凡组织旨在反驳这些观念,并表明女性应得到与男性同等的关注。我们的第一项举措是在我们的社区中识别出患有CTD的女孩,并开发了一份国际调查问卷,以收集该人群中更具体的数据。在完成问卷的22个家庭中,症状出现(平均年龄1.8岁)到诊断(平均年龄11.8岁)之间的延迟凸显了女孩诊断的困难,她们在最终确诊为CTD之前,往往会经历多次摇摆不定的诊断。几乎一半的家庭(47%)在预约专科医生时遇到困难。我们的调查问卷强调,患有CTD的女孩与男性有相同的症状,在发育里程碑方面也有类似的延迟。这些数据引起了关注,研究人员已开始将女孩纳入他们的研究。我们坚信,即将开展的关于女性的研究将丰富我们的知识,加深我们对CTD的理解,有助于更好地诊断女孩,并开发出适配的治疗方法。