Children with infantile nephropathic cystinosis (INC), an inherited lysosomal storage disease resulting in cystine accumulation in all body cells, are prone to progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD), impaired growth and reduced weight gain; however, systematic anthropometric analyses are lacking. In this prospective multicenter study we investigated linear growth, body proportion, body mass index (BMI), upper arm fat area (UFA) and biochemical parameters in 43 pediatric INC patients with CKD stages 1 to 5 and 49 age-matched CKD controls, with 193 annual measurements. INC patients showed more impaired height than CKD controls (−1.8 vs −0.7 z-score; P
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Kluck, R., Müller, S., Jagodzinski, C., Hohenfellner, K., Büscher, A., Kemper, M. J., … Zivicnjak, M. (2022). Body growth, upper arm fat area, and clinical parameters in children with nephropathic cystinosis compared with other pediatric chronic kidney disease entities. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, 45(2), 192–202. https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.12473
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