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BACKGROUND: Gaucher disease (GD) manifests heterogeneously and other conditions are often misdiagnosed in its place, leading to diagnostic delays. The Gaucher Earlier Diagnosis Consensus (GED-C) initiative proposed a point-scoring system (PSS) based on the signs and covariables that are most indicative of GD to help clinicians identify which individuals to test for GD. AIMS: To validate the PSS retrospectively in a test population including patients with GD and other conditions with overlapping manifestations. METHODS: Four cohorts of adults with GD, liver disease, haematological malignancy or immune thrombocytopenia were identified from hospital records. Clinical data were audited for GED-C factors identified as potentially indicative of GD and aggregate scores calculated (sum of scores/number of factors) based on published PSS weightings. Threshold discriminatory PSS scores, sensitivity and specificity were determined by receiver-operating characteristic analysis. RESULTS: Among 100 patients (GD, n = 25; non-GD, n = 75), analyses based on 11 possible factors estimated group mean (standard deviation) PSS scores of: GD (n = 14), 1.08 (0.25); non-GD (n = 38), 0.58 (0.31). Mean between-group difference (95% confidence interval) was -0.49 (-0.68, -0.31) and area under the receiver-operating characteristic analysis curve (95% confidence interval) was 0.88 (0.78, 0.97). A threshold PSS score of 0.82 identified all 14 patients with GD in the analysis set (100% sensitivity) and 27 of 38 patients in the non-GD group (71% specificity). Patients with liver disease and haematological malignancy were most likely to have manifestations overlapping GD. CONCLUSIONS: Preliminary validation of the GED-C PSS discriminated effectively between patients with GD and those with overlapping signs.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1111/imj.14942

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2020-12-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

50

Pages

1538 - 1546

Total pages

8

Keywords

consensus, delayed diagnosis, early diagnosis, receiver-operating characteristic curve, sensitivity and specificity, Adult, Early Diagnosis, Gaucher Disease, Humans, ROC Curve, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity