Teresa, Maria Angeles GarciaAbal, Raquel PortoTorres, Silvia RodriguezUrabayen, Diego GarciaMartinez, Silvia GarciaTrang, HaBarros, Angel CamposGrupo Espanol de Trabajo del SHCC2025-01-072025-01-072017-05-011695-4033https://hdl.handle.net/10668/24988Introduction: Congenital Central Hypoventilation Syndrome (CCHS) is a very rare genetic disease. In 2012 the European Central Hypoventilation Syndrome (EuCHS) Consortium created an online patient registry in order to improve care.Aim: To determine the characteristics and outcomes of Spanish patients with CCHS, and detect clinical areas for improvement.Materials and method: An assessment was made on the data from Spanish patients in the European Registry, updated on December 2015.Results: The Registry contained 38 patients, born between 1987 and 2013, in 18 hospitals. Thirteen (34.2%) were older than 18 years. Three patients had died. Genetic analysis identified PHOX2B mutations in 32 (86.5%) out of 37 patients assessed. The 20/25, 20/26 and 20/27 polyalanine repeat mutations (PARMs) represented 84.3% of all mutations. Longer PARMs had more, as well as more severe, autonomic dysfunctions. Eye diseases were present in 47%, with 16% having Hirschsprung disease, 13% with hypoglycaemia, and 5% with tumours. Thirty patients (79%) required ventilation from the neonatal period onwards, and 8 (21%) later on in life (late onset/presentation). Eight children (21%) were using mask ventilation at the first home discharge. Five of them were infants with neonatal onset, two of them, both having a severe mutation, were switched to tracheostomy after cardiorespiratory arrest at home. Approximately one-third (34.3%) of patients were de-cannulated and switched to mask ventilation at a mean age of 13.7 years. Educational reinforcement was required in 29.4% of children attending school.Conclusion: The implementation of the EuCHS Registry in Spain has identified some relevant issues for optimising healthcare, such as the importance of genetic study for diagnosis and assessment of severity, the high frequency of eye disease and educational reinforcement, as well as some limitations in ventilatory techniques. (C) 2016 Asociacion Espanola de Pediatria. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U. All rights reserved.esAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Congenital central hypoventilation syndromeRegistryHealth careRare diseasePHOX2BOnset central hypoventilationPositive-pressure ventilationHypothalamic dysfunctionAutomatic-controlOndines-cursePhox2b geneChildrenMutationsPhenotypeFailureSpanish patients with central hypoventilation syndrome included in the European Registry. The 2015 dataresearch article27377324open access10.1016/j.anpedi.2016.05.0081696-4608https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anpedi.2016.05.008401496800004