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Showing 1 to 7 of 7 results for mucopolysaccharidosis
Showing 1 to 7 of 7 results for mucopolysaccharidosis
Elosulfase alfa for treating mucopolysaccharidosis type 4A (HST19)
Evidence-based recommendations on elosulfase alfa (Vimizim) for treating mucopolysaccharidosis type 4A in people of all ages.
Awaiting development Reference number: GID-TA11701 Expected publication date: TBC
Intrathecal idursulfase for treating Mucopolysaccharidosis type II ID1223
Discontinued Reference number: GID-HST10019
Elosulfase alfa for treating mucopolysaccharidosis type IVa (HST2)
This guidance has been updated and replaced by NICE’s highly specialised technologies guidance on elosulfase alfa for treating mucopolysaccharidosis type 4A (HST19).
Evidence-based recommendations on sebelipase alfa (Kanuma) for long-term enzyme replacement therapy in Wolman disease (rapidly progressive lysosomal acid lipase deficiency) in people aged 2 years and under when treatment starts.
Rehabilitation for chronic neurological disorders including acquired brain injury (NG252)
This guideline covers rehabilitation in all settings for children, young people and adults with a chronic neurological disorder, neurological impairment or disabling neurological symptoms due to acquired brain injury, acquired spinal cord injury, acquired peripheral nerve disorder, functional neurological disorder or progressive neurological disease.
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Sections for NG252
- Overview
- Designing and commissioning rehabilitation services
- Assessing rehabilitation needs and goal setting
- Rehabilitation planning and delivery
- Information, advice and learning as part of rehabilitation
- Rehabilitation to maintain, improve or support function
- Rehabilitation to support education, work, social and leisure activities, relationships and sex
- Terms used in this guideline
This document describes a real-world evidence framework that aims to improve the quality of real-world evidence informing our guidance. The framework does not set minimum standards for the acceptability of evidence. The framework is mainly targeted at those developing evidence to inform NICE guidance. It is also relevant to patients, those collecting data, and reviewers of evidence