Cause of death in Wilson disease

JM Walshe - Movement disorders: official journal of the …, 2007 - Wiley Online Library
JM Walshe
Movement disorders: official journal of the Movement Disorder Society, 2007Wiley Online Library
Before 1948, all patients with Wilson disease died shortly after diagnosis. In 1948, BAL
(dimercaprol) was introduced as a possible effective treatment, to be followed by
penicillamine (1955), zinc salts (1961), trientine (1969), liver transplantation (1982), and
tetrathiomolybdate (1984). Despite this wide range of therapeutic options, patients still die.
This article examines the cause of death in 67 patients (33 men, 34 women) out of a series
of 300 seen between 1948 and 2000. Patients were classified according to their …
Abstract
Before 1948, all patients with Wilson disease died shortly after diagnosis. In 1948, BAL (dimercaprol) was introduced as a possible effective treatment, to be followed by penicillamine (1955), zinc salts (1961), trientine (1969), liver transplantation (1982), and tetrathiomolybdate (1984). Despite this wide range of therapeutic options, patients still die. This article examines the cause of death in 67 patients (33 men, 34 women) out of a series of 300 seen between 1948 and 2000. Patients were classified according to their presentation as neurological, 32 patients, hepatic 11, mixed hepatic/neurological 10, hemolytic, 6, and “sibling biopsy ” 8. Diagnostic failure was the principal cause of death but there were multiple other causes of which the principal was poor compliance and the development of malignant disease after 10 years of follow‐up. The development of new symptoms should alert the physician to the possibility of a new pathology. © 2007 Movement Disorder Society
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