Newborn screening (NBS) is one of the most effective measures of secondary prevention. While the benefit of NBS on the clinical long-term outcomes of children with inherited metabolic diseases (IMD) has been demonstrated, the potential burden of families living with an early diagnosed and treated child with an IMD has not been thoroughly investigated. The aim of this longitudinal questionnaire-based study on 369 families living with a child with an IMD was to investigate the psychosocial and financial burden following a true-positive NBS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Structured transition of adolescents and young adults with a chronic endocrine disease from paediatric to adult care is important. Until now, no data on time and resources required for the necessary components of the transition process and the associated costs are available.
Design, Patients And Measurements: In a prospective cohort study of 147 patients with chronic endocrinopathies, for the key elements of a structured transition pathway including (i) assessment of patients' disease-related knowledge and needs, (ii) required education and counselling sessions, (iii) compiling an epicrisis and a transfer appointment of the patient together with the current paediatric and the future adult endocrinologist resource consumption and costs were determined.
The current German newborn screening (NBS) panel includes 13 inherited metabolic diseases (IMDs). In addition, a NBS pilot study in Southwest Germany identifies individuals with propionic acidemia (PA), methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), combined and isolated remethylation disorders (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: A structured transition of adolescents and young adults with chronic autoinflammatory and autoimmune disorders from the pediatric to the adult health care system is important. To date, data on the time, processes, outcome, resources required for the necessary components of the transition process and the associated costs are lacking.
Methods: Evaluation of resource use and costs in a prospective cohort study of 58 adolescents with chronic autoinflammatory and autoimmune disorders, for the key elements of a structured transition pathway including (i) compilation of a summary of patient history, (ii) assessment of patients' disease-related knowledge and needs, (iii) required education and counseling sessions, (iv) and a transfer appointment of the patient with the current pediatric and the future adult rheumatologist.
Background: The structured transition of adolescents and young adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD) from pediatric to adult care is important, but data on the time and resources required for the necessary components of the transition process and the associated costs are lacking.
Methods: In a prospective single-center cohort study of 52 patients with pre-transplant CKD (CKD stage 1, n = 10; stage 2, n = 6; stage 3, n = 5; stage 4 and 5, 1 patient each) or kidney transplant recipients (KTR), resource use and costs were evaluated for the key elements of a structured transition pathway, including (i) assessment of patients' disease-related knowledge and needs, (ii) required education and counseling sessions, and (iii) compiling an epicrisis and a transfer appointment of the patient with the current pediatric and the future adult nephrologist.
Results: Forty-four of 52 enrolled patients (84.