Exploring patient-reported outcomes and morbidity burden of patients with VEXAS syndrome: a scoping review.

VEXAS (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, auto-inflammatory, somatic) is a recently discovered syndrome of autoinflammatory origin affecting mainly older patients with a clinical picture encompassing a variety of hematological and rheumatological conditions. We aimed to gather current knowledge on patient-reported outcomes (PRO) and morbidity burden of VEXAS patients.

A scoping review conducted via PubMed (last updated September 2024) identified studies involving VEXAS patients, excluding studies primarily addressing hematologic adverse events or laboratory parameters, with no lower date restriction. A double-review process was applied from screening to data charting. Outcomes included the prevalence of manifestations of VEXAS-related morbidity burden and their aggregated rates, adhering to the PRISMA-ScR guidelines.

Out of 357 records, 31 studies met the inclusion criteria, analyzing 1437 patients. The median study sample size was 40 patients (IQR 16-59). Most studies (96·8%) were non-interventional and mostly conducted in France (38·7%) and the USA (32·3%). The median age at symptom onset was 67 years (IQR 66-68·6). Myelodysplastic syndrome was the most common concomitant disease, present in 93·6% of studies. No studies documenting PROs were identified. Skin and pulmonary involvement were the most frequently reported manifestations, appearing in 100% and 96·8% of studies, respectively. Moreover, skin lesions had the highest median prevalence (83·6%, IQR 76-90), followed by fever (81·2%, IQR 67·5-89) and general constitutional symptoms (76%, IQR 54·8-85·3). All symptoms identified in this review were clinician-reported.

Our findings may provide preliminary insights into future PRO assessment strategies for VEXAS syndrome. We also advocate for international concerted efforts for a rapid uptake of PRO evidence-based data that can help inform the development of patient-centric therapies for this rare disease.

This work was supported by AIRC5×1000 call "Metastatic disease: the key unmet need in oncology" to MYNERVA project, #21267 Myeloid Neoplasms Research Venture AIRC. Detailed description is available at http://www.progettoagimm.it.
Cancer
Care/Management

Authors

Efficace Efficace, Krepper Krepper, Sparano Sparano, Fazi Fazi, Voso Voso, Gurnari Gurnari
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