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P.058 Neuromuscular neurologists’ experience in recognizing, diagnosing, and treating Long-chain fatty acid disorders (LC-FAOD): a national survey
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 May 2024
Abstract
Background: LC-FAOD may be missed in neuromuscular (NM) clinics due to its rarity and absence from common NM genetic panels. The Canadian Neuromuscular Disease Registry (CNDR) collects real-world patient data and includes a network of clinician-investigators. Our objective was to inform future registry work by evaluating diagnosis pathways for LC-FAOD patients and estimating the number followed at Canadian NM clinics. Methods: A questionnaire was developed with an expert committee and circulated to 111 CNDR-affiliated NM neurologists. Results: 12 neurologists in 5 provinces, primarily adult-treating (n=8) completed the survey (10.8% response rate). Eleven (91.7%) practiced for >10 years. Agreement trends existed between definition of, and tests to evaluate, rhabdomyolysis. Four clinics routinely follow LC-FAOD patients. In the last 1-2 years, respondents diagnosed approximately 91 patients with LC-FAOD (mean=7.5 per clinic). 83.3% never received continuing education on LC-FAOD, though 75% indicated interest in expert-led webinars. Further data will be presented. Conclusions: Low sample size limits conclusions about LC-FAOD clinical trends. Results suggest LC-FAOD may be under-diagnosed or not routinely followed by NM specialists, limiting viability of an LC-FAOD registry. Practitioners may be interested in LC-FAOD-specific education. Future work could include collaboration with metabolic geneticists on education initiatives to raise awareness and improve care for these patients.
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- © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation