PNPO deficiency
Transcript
PNPO deficiency
Roma, 17/10/2015 Dipar$mentodiPediatriaeNeuropsichiatriaInfan$le Ges$onedelleemergenzenellemala/e metaboliche VincenzoLeuzzi The Metabolic (and Molecular) Bases of Inherited Disease Scriver, Beaudet, Valle, Sly McGraw-Hill Child, Kinzler, Vogelstein 1960 1966 1972 1978 1983 <1000 pp 1989 1995 2001 >6000 pp 2001 > ∞ Errori Congeniti del Metabilismo (ECM) Classificazione degli ECM • Gruppo 1. Malattie che compromettono il metabolismo di molecole complesse • Gruppo 2. Errori congeniti del metabolismo intermedio (disease of the intoxication type) • Gruppo 3. Errori congeniti del metabolismo energetico J.M. Saudubray, 2001 Epidemiologia degli ECM nell’infanzia • Applegarth et al. Incidence of inborn errors of metabolism in British Columbia, 1969-1996. Pediatrics, 2000;105:1-6. • Dionisi-Vici et al. Inborn errors of metabolism in the Italian pediatric population: a national retrospective survey. J Pediatr, 2002;140:231-7. • Sanderson et al. The incidence of inherited metabolic disorders in the West Midlands, UK. Arch Dis Chil 2006;91:896-9. Epidemiologia degli ECM nell’infanzia (Sanderson et al., 2006) Malattie metaboliche: età alla diagnosi Sanderson et al., 2006 Malattie metaboliche: età alla diagnosi Sanderson et al., 2006 Trattamento etiologico delle ECM • Rimozione metaboliti tossici • Restrizione del substrato • Attivazione di pathways alternativi • Inibitori metabolici • Reintegrazione dei metaboliti carenti • Interventi a livello della proteina deficitaria • Attivazione tramite cofattore vitaminico • Terapia sostitutiva (protein replacement therapy) • Trapianto d’organo • Trapianto di midollo osseo • Terapia genica ECM ad esordio acuto “…the unexpected and mysterious deterioration of a child after a normal initial period is the most important signal of the presence of an inherited disease of the intoxication type” J.M. Saudubray, 2001 Principali pattern di acuzie clinica • deterioramento neurologico • con epilessia (es, B6 def, NKH, GAMT def, ...) • senza epilessia (UCDs, BCOAs, MSUD) • insufficienza epatica (es. galattosemia, tirosinemia tipo I, ...) • insufficienza cardiaca (es. FAO, malattia di Pompe, ...) Principali pattern di acuzie clinica (trattabili in modo specifico )nel neonato 1. Neurological deterioration (metabolic encephalopathy): Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD), branched-chain organic acidurias (BCOAs) and urea cycle defects (UCDs). 2. Liver failure: Galactosaemia, hereditary fructose intolerance and tyrosinaemia type I. 3. Hypoglycaemia: hyperinsulinism, glycogen storage disease (GSD) and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (FAO) defects. 4. Cardiac failure: In neonates the only treatable disorders are FAO defects. 5. Primary hyperlactataemia: lack of cellular energy and may be due to different enzymatic defects. Some patients may benefit from high-dose vitamin treatment. 6. Intractable convulsions: Vitamin responsiveness (pyridoxine, pyridoxal phosphate, folinic acid, biotin). Deterioramento neurologico senza epilessia nel neonato • • • • • • • • • • • • • intervallo libero ore/giorni difficoltà di suzione e deglutizione coma segni da interessamento neurovegetativo anomalie respiratorie singhiozzo bradicardia ipotermia episodi di ipertono/opistotono boxing or pedaling movements ipotono assiale/ipertono degli arti tremore ad elevata ampiezza/myoclonic jerks ipotonia generalizzata Deficit neurologici acuti nel bambino e nell'adolescente neurologicalsigns diseases coma UDCs,BCOAs,MSUD,FAO,GA-1,mul3plecarboxylasedef,hyperinsulinism seizures NKH,B6metabolismdef,GAMTdef,Minkesdeseases,OXPHO,GLUT1,Lys(GaucherIII,NPC), UDCs,BCOAs,MSUD,FAO,GA-1,mul3plecarboxylasedef,hyperinsulinism,etc oculogyriccrysis neurotransmiOersdis;PKU ataxia MSUD,PDH,UCDs,mul3plecarboxylase,B12defects,GLUT1,SSDAH,Thiamineresponsive encephalop,... dystonia BCOAs,AG-1,Wilsond,aceruloplasm,bio3nresponsivebasalgangliadisease,GAMT,Hct, Lesh-Nyhan,... stroke-like OXPHOS(MELAS),OCT,Hct,CDGs,OAs,Fabry,beta-ketothiolase,... demen$a acereruloplasmine,Wilsond,alphamannosidase,X-ALD,porphyria,bio3nidasedef,... suddenhearingloss MELAS suddenvisualloss MELAS,Leber,MMA,PA,Hct,X-ALD,porphyria,bio3nidasedef, pain Fabry,Gaucher,Krabbe,prolidasedef, acuteperipheralneuropathy PDH,bio3nidase,MLD,MSUDvariant,tyrosinemiatypeI,LCHAD/MTP hydrocephalus MPSI,II,IV,Cbl-C,Cbl-D,MTHFR,Gaucher,NKH,mannosidosis myoglobinuria FAO,muscleGSD,OXPHOS,LIPIN1,porphyria,Wilsond cramps FAO,muscleGSD Emergency diagnostic procedures First line diagnostic tests (bedside) • general clinical chemistry • complete blood count, CRP, electrolites, liver and kidney function tests • baseline metabolic screen tests • blood gas +anion gap • lactate • glucose • ammonia • uric acid • CK • urinary ketones • urinary reducing substances • • • • • Second-line investigations (by 24-48 hours) blood/plasma acylcarnitine plasma amino acids urinari organic acids urinary orotic acids conditional additional tests: • gal-1-p; GALT (suspected galactosemia) • free fatty acids, 3-hydroxybutyrate, insulin (sispected hyperinsulinism) • purine analysis (suspected disorders of purine metab) Emergency scenarios • Hyperammoniemia • Metabolic acidosis • Hypoglicemia Assessment of intermediary metabolism over the course of the day COMA Saudubray, 2011 COMA Saudubray, 2011 Emergency treatment • Supportive care circulatory and ventilatory support, rehydratation, correction of mineral and/or electrolyte imbalance (Ca, Mg, P), prevent and treat infections Hyperammonia • stop protein intake • intravenous glucose (to stop catabolic status) • if hyperglycemia à insulin (not reduce glucose infusion) • detoxication of ammonia: • Benzoate (250mg/kg/day in 4-6 div doses) • Phenylbutirate (250mg/kg/day in 4-6 div doses) • Arginine (250mg/kg/day in 4-6 div doses) (not in hyperargininemia) • N-carbamylglutamate • extracorporeal detoxification Hyperammonia (UCD, OA: MMA, PA, IVA) Cagnon & Braissant, 2007 Ogier de Baulny, Dionisi-Vici, Wendel Acidosis (base deficit>8mmol/l) • • • • if dehydrated à saline 0.9% (20 ml/kg) glucose 200 mg/kg at once (2 ml/kg of 10% glucose) over a few minutes continue with glucose 10% saline 0.45% at 5 ml/kg/h. if acidosi is still not corrected à sodium bicarbonate 8.4% over 20-30' • blood gases over 30 min • continuous bicarbonate infusions Carnitine Vitamins: • B12 à MMA (nutrizional B12 defect, Cblc) • Biotin (holocarboxilase dehydrogenase synthetase) • Thyamine (lactic acidosis) • Riboflavine (MADD) Hypoglicemia (blood glucose < 2.6mmol/l) • • • • • • • • • • • lactate free fatty acids insulin cortisol blood spot blood spot acylcarnitine profile plasma amino acids uric acid urine ketones urine organic acids dextrose 10 % 5 bolus 2 ml/kg à continue with infusions (3-6 ml/kg/h) Earlyonsetmetabolicepilep$cencephalopathies treatable untreatable amino-andorganicacidopathies typicalphenylketonuria nonketo$chyperglycinemia serinebiosynthesisdefects AGC1(SLC25A12)deficiency;GC1(SLC25A22)deficiency D-2hydroxyglutaricaciduria;ethylmalonicacididuria(ETH1) cofactordisturbances bio$nasedeficiency isolatedsulfideoxidasedeficiency BH4metabolismdefects molybdenumcofactordeficiency(typeB) pyridoxine/pyridoxal-phosphate–dependentepilepsy(folinicacidrespSeiz) Menkesdisease molybdenumcofactordeficiency(typeA;MOCS1) Cerebralfolatedeficiency(CFD):DHPR,FORL1 inbornerrorsofenerge$cmetabolism GLUT1defect crea$netransportdefect(males) crea$netranspor(femalecarriers)andcrea$nesynthesis(GAMT)defects mitochondiopathies peroxysomaldisorders Zellwegersyndrome,neonatalALD lysosomaldisorders neuronalceroidlipofuscinoses,gangliosidioses,sialidosis disordersofneurotransmi\ers GABAtransaminanasedeficiency congenitaldisordersofglycosila$on CDGIc,Ik,II disordersofpurinemetabolism adenylosuccinatelyasedefect B6-dependency:brainMRI Shihetal,1996 B6-dependency:progressivebrainatrophy 10 days 4 years Gospe&Hecht,1998 B6-dependency:brainGPET1996 Shihet.al.,1996 7.5years:Isolatedthinningofposteriorregionof corpuscallosum Rankinetal,2007 Pyridoxine/PLP dependent seizures L-Proline - - P5C P5C-dehydrogenase L-Lysine P6C AASA dehydr Garcia-Cazorla, Gibson, Clayton, 2012; modified Inborn errors and vitamin B6 dependent epilepsy increased utilixation of PLP TYPE II HYPERPROLINEMIA (? febrile) seizure onset infancy to childhood ± response to common antiepileptic drugs ± mental retardation ANTIQUIN DEFICIENCY neonatal onset of myoclonic seizures resistence to common anticonvulsivants 30% poor adaptation/ HI 30% signs of encephalopathy prematurity systemic manifestation (abd distension, vomiting..) Proline metabolism An$qui$nandB6-dependency pathogenesis α-AASDH Clayton,2006 The phenotype of B6-dependent epilepsy • incidence: 1/20.000 – 1/750.000 (marked geographical variation) • autosomal recessive transmission • typical presentations – refractory seizures in neonate; often prenatal seizures with secondary asphyxia – multiple seizure types focal, generalized, atonic, myoclonic, infantile spasms, severe sudden epileptic status; – newborn encephalopathy: • Jitteriness, hypothermia, dystonia • restlessness, irritability, and emesis preceding the seizures – only remit with pyridoxine – progressive encephalopathy if not promptly treated • atypical presentation and course – late onset (< 19 months) – partial or transient responsiveness to conventional antiepileptic therapy (Lin et al, 2007) – transient unresponsiveness to B6 treatment (Claus et al, 2003) – protract seizures free interval after B6 discontinuation (Baxter 2003, Gospe 2002) • prenatal examination: progressive bilateral asymmetric ventriculomegaly • > 7 days: multifocal clonic and generalized tonico-clonic seizures • > 21 days: pyridoxine (14 mg/kg/day) à no further seizures • 2 months pyridoxine discontinuation à seizures recurrence à pyridoxine reintegration (30 mg/kg/day) • urine AASA: 30.6 mmol/mol creat; r.v. 0.0-2) • ALDH7A1 gene: p.Ala149Glu/Arg307X • 7 months: no seizures, normal development, normal EEG - 13-month old girl - profound neonatal hypoglycemia, lactic acidosis - MRI: bilateral temporal lobe hemorrhages, thalamic changes - multifocal and myoclonic seizures refractory to multiple antiepileptic drugs that responded to pyridoxine (200 mg/day) - ALDH7A1 gene: c.834G.A (p.Val278Val)/c.1192G.C (p.Gly398Arg) - Urinary a-AASA: 21.3 mmol/mol creatinine (r.v. < 1) - CSF pyridoxal phosphate 3.6 nmol/L (r.r.: 30–80) EEG:hypsarrhythmiabeforeB6 Clausetal,2003 Clausetal,2003 1month,mul$focalmyoclonicepilepsy Linetal,2007 Treatment • Normalpyridoxineintake:8μg/kg/day • Pyridoxine – op3maldosageforlifelongmaintenance:∼15mg–50mg/kg/day(max500mg/day) – pregnantwomen(prenataltreatment)50-100mg/day(Baxter,2003) – noadversesideeffectsupto24mg/kg/day(Baxter,2002);monitorNC(Rankin,2007) • Pyridoxineintoxica$on:dorsalrootganglionopathy(painfulneuropathy),sensoryataxia,possiblemotor neuropathy,rash,photosensi3vity. • Treatmentmonitoring: – EEGandclinicalexamina3on – α-AASAandpipecolicacidarenotalteredbythetreatment(Bok,2007) • Lysinerestricteddiet(20-100mg/kg/day)(vanKarnebeeketal,2012;2014) – êα-AASA,pipecolic,lysineinbiologicalfluids Pyridoxine/PLP dependent seizures AOX (MoCof) Pyridoxic acid (urine) Garcia-Cazorla, Gibson, Clayton, 2012; modified Inborn errors and vitamin B6 dependent epilepsy increased utilixation of PLP TYPE II HYPERPROLINEMIA ANTIQUIN DEFICIENCY reduced synthesis of brain PLP PNPO DEFICIENCY INFANTILE TNSALP DEFICIENCY (hypophosphatasia) MABRY SYNDROME (PIGV gene) hyperphosphatasia seizure onset infancy to childhood ± response to common antiepileptic drugs ± mental retardation neonatal onset of myoclonic seizures hypophosphatasia resistence to common anticonvulsivants neonatal seizures in lethal neonatal or infantile forms dysmorphy mental retardation prematurity resistance to common antoconvulsivants systemic manifestation (abd distension, vomiting..) death due to resp. insufficiency 30% poor adaptation/ HI 30% signs of encephalopathy floppy infant brachy-telefalangy seizures rickets Inclusion body (PASpos) Inborn errors and vitamin B6 dependent epilepsy increased utilixation of PLP TYPE II HYPERPROLINEMIA (? febrile) seizure onset infancy to childhood ± response to common antiepileptic drugs ± mental retardation ANTIQUIN DEFICIENCY reduced synthesis of brain PLP PNPO DEFICIENCY INFANTILE TNSALP DEFICIENCY (hypophosphatasia) neonatal onset of myoclonic seizures neonatal seizures - in lethal neonatal or infantile forms resistence to common anticonvulsivants 30% poor adaptation/ HI MABRY SYNDROME (hyperphosphatasia) resistance to common antoconvulsivants 30% signs of encephalopathy prematurity death due to resp. insufficiency systemic manifestation (abd distension, vomiting..) Thompson et al, 2010 PNPOdeficiency:earlysymptoms no.ofcases fetalseizures 3/16 fetaldistresspriortodelivery 5/16 prematurebirth/lowAPGARscore/intuba$onatdelivery 5/16 onsetofseizures<24h 11/14 24-72h 2/14 72h-2weeks 1/14 burstsuppressionpa\ern(EEG) 10/11 drug-resistentseizures 13/16 pyridoxine-resistenfseizures 7/10 acidosis 6/16 lac$cacidosis 8/16 distressingdystonicspasms 3/16 anemia 3/16 hepatomegalia 3/13 abdominaldistension 2/16 hypoglycaemia 2/16 Garcia-Cazorla, Gibson, Clayton, 2012 Mills et al, 2014 Mills et al, 2014 Treatment of PNPO defect PLP (Pyridoxal-5-phosphate responsive patients) 10-53 mg/kg/day; 4-6 divided doses/day Pyridoxine (Pyridoxine-responsive patients) 5.5-50 mg/kg/day; 2-4 divided doses/day ? Riboflavin (? according to PNPO genotype) 100 mg /day Advers events peripheral neuropathy (pyridoxine > PLP) (? > 200 mg/day) liver toxicity (cirrhosis, hepatic fibrosis): high PLP dosages (100 mg/kg) (Mills et al, 2012); 1000 mg/day (Yoshida et al., 1985 in homocystinuria ). Patterns of therapeutic response and PNPO genotypes treatmentresponse PNPOgenotype Ref pa$entsrespondingtoPLP E50K/E50K+spliceerror D33V/D33V P213S/P213S R95C/R95C Q214fs/? R116Q/R116Q R229W/R229W X262Q/X262Q R229Q/P229Q A174X/A174X R95H/R95H Millsetal,Brain2014 Millsetal,HumMolGenet,2006 Millsetal,HumMolGenet,2006 Wareetal,DMCN2013 Ruizetal,MolGenetMetab2008 Khayatetal,MolGenetMetab2008 pa$entsrespondingto pyridoxine(poten3ally worseningunderPLP) R116Q/R116Q D33V/D33V D33V/E120K D33V/spliceerrors D33V+R225C+R116Q R225H/R225H R225H;R116Q+R225H;R116Qc R225H;R116Q+R225H;R116Qc R141C/c.279_290del G118R/G118R Millsetal,Brain2014 Pleckoetal,Neurology2014 Pearl,JMDr2013 pa$ent(s)respondingto pyridoxineplusriboflavine(B2) D33V+R225C+R116Q Millsetal,Brain2014(pt.12Mills2014) ?suscep$bilityalleletoPLPresponsiveepilepsy R116Q Millsetal,Brain2014 Clinical Outcome of PNPO defect - fatal if untreated (a single child surviving with severe epilepsy and psychomotor delay to 3 years of age - Hoffmann et al., 2007). - 7 treated cases with PLP: 6/7 survived with varying degrees of disability (1 died as a result of fungal sepsis (Ruiz et al., 2008). Mills et al, Brain 2014 CEREBRAL FOLATE DEFICIENCY (CFD) Serrano et al, 2012 Folate metabolism Serrano et al, 2012 CEREBRAL FOLATE DEFICIENCY (CFD) early onset progressive encephalopat. apnoea, seizure, hydrocephalus 4 mo:secondary microcephaly AED refractory seizures Oral Betaine: 100 mg/kg up to 20 g/day oral Folinic acid: 1 mg/kg day Some patients treated with 5-MTHF Serrano et al, 2012, mod DIYDROFOLATE REDUCTASE DEFICIENY • related parents • 4months:generalizedtonic-clonicandright-sided focalseizuresrefractorytoAEDs • secondary microcephaly • megaloblastic anemia à pancytopenia • plasma: normal Hcyst, folates, B12 • urine: normal MMA • CSF: low 5-MTHF, BH4, HVA, 5-HIAA • treatment: oral folinic acid: 30 mg day à • 19 months: stabilization of seizures under treatment; severe brain damage • DHPR gene: homoz c.238C>T (p.Leu80Phe) Banka et al, 2011 Urea cycle gly Disorders of Cr metabolism arg AGAT gaa é orn Kidney S-adomet ATP GAMT S-adohcy Liver ê Cr ADP Cr CT1 PCr CK Muscle, Brain Cr Crn Urinary escretion Creatine deficiency: clinical findings Leuzzi et al, 2013 GAMTdeficiency:Clinicalfindingsin34pts • Mentalretarda$onandlanguagedisorder 34/34 • Epilepsy 29/34 • Au$s$ctraitsandotherbehaviordisorders 23/34 • Movementdisorders(includingataxia) 20/34 • Pallidumaltera$onsonbrainMRI 8/29 • Hypotonia 16/34 • Lateneurologicaldeteriora$on(?)(CaldeiraAraujoetal,2005) • Rare(?)symptoms:microcephaly(2)cirrhosis(1),failureto thrive(?) Epilepsy • Age of onset < 3yrs (range 0-5 yrs) • Variable pattern of seizures in the same patient – convulsions with fever (at onset) – generalized tonic-clonic seizures, – drop attacks, – absences, non-convulsive status epilepticus – life-threatening tonic seizures with apnea, – myoclonic seizures, – partial seizures with secondary generalization • EEG: bilateral or multifocal spikes and slow wave discharges • Drug-responsive epilepsy (21/29) • Drug unresponsive epilepsy (8/29) GLUCOSETRANSPORTERPROTEIN (GLUT1)DEFICIENCY Defec/veglucosetransportacrossthebloodbrainbarrierasa causeofpersistenthypoglycorrhachia,seizures,and developmentaldelay DeVivoetal,NEnglJMed.,1991, 325:703-709 GLUT1deficiency:clinicalphenotype Classicphenotype(DeVivophenotype)(≈90%) – earlyonset(6.5mesi,r.0.5-77)severeepilep$cencephalopathy – secondarymicrocephaly – progressivepsychomotorretarda$onàseverementalretarda$on – languageretarda$on, – clumsiness, – pyramidalsigns – ataxia Phenotypicvariants(withoutepilepsyasmainsymptom) • Carbohydrate-responsivephenotype(Brockmannetal2001,Cigdem2010)) • Mentalretarda$on(MR)andintermi/ngataxia(Overweg-Plandsoenetal2003) • Mentalretarda$on,behavioraloutbursts,dyskinesias/dystonia/ataxia(Friedmanetal2006) • Paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesias with moderate to severe MR (Zorzi et al 2008) • Paroxysmalexercise-induceddyskinesiaswithoutorwithmildMR(Weberetal2008;Schneider etal2008;Sulsetal2008); • Withhemoly$canemiaandacanthocytosis(Weber et al 2008); GLUT1deficiency:diagnosis • CSF – ↓glucose: • severeformà30.6±5.4mg/dL(nv60-80mg/dL); • mild/lateonsetform41-52mg/dL – ↓CSF/bloodglucose • severeformà0.35±0.07,cutoff0.45(nv0.65); • mild/lateonsetformlateonset0.47-0.59(cutoff??)(Weberetal2008;Sulsetal 2008) – ↓lactate • severeformà1.1±0.35mmol/L(nv1.0-2.8mmol/L) • mild/lateonsetformànormal(Weberetal2008;Sulsetal2008) • 3-O-methyl-D-glucoseuptakeintoerythrocytes • SLCA1geneanalysis(asfiststepforallthemild/lateonset forms) Ann Neurol , 2002 A mouse model for Glut-1 haploinsufficiency Dong Wang1, Juan M. Pascual1, Hong Yang1, Kristin Engelstad1, Xia Mao1, Jianfeng Cheng2, Jong Yoo3, Jeffrey L. Noebels3 and Darryl C. De Vivo1,* Wang, D. et al. Hum. Mol. Genet. 2006 15:1169-1179; doi:10.1093/hmg/ddl032 Copyright restrictions may apply. Pyridoxine/PLP dependent seizures L-Proline - - P5C P5C-dehydrogenase L-Lysine P6C AASA dehydr AOX (MoCof) Pyridoxic acid (urine) Garcia-Cazorla, Gibson, Clayton, 2012; modified Earlyonsetmetabolicepilep$cencephalopathies treatable untreatable amino-andorganicacidopathies typicalphenylketonuria nonketo$chyperglycinemia serinebiosynthesisdefects AGC1(SLC25A12)deficiency;GC1(SLC25A22)deficiency D-2hydroxyglutaricaciduria;ethylmalonicacididuria(ETH1) cofactordisturbances bio$nasedeficiency isolatedsulfideoxidasedeficiency BH4metabolismdefects molybdenumcofactordeficiency(typeB) pyridoxine/pyridoxal-phosphate–dependentepilepsy(folinicacidrespSeiz) Menkesdisease molybdenumcofactordeficiency(typeA;MOCS1) Cerebralfolatedeficiency(CFD):DHPR,FORL1 inbornerrorsofenerge$cmetabolism GLUT1defect crea$netransportdefect(males) crea$netranspor(femalecarriers)andcrea$nesynthesis(GAMT)defects mitochondiopathies peroxysomaldisorders Zellwegersyndrome,neonatalALD lysosomaldisorders neuronalceroidlipofuscinoses,gangliosidioses,sialidosis disordersofneurotransmi\ers GABAtransaminanasedeficiency congenitaldisordersofglycosila$on CDGIc,Ik,II disordersofpurinemetabolism adenylosuccinatelyasedefect Saudubray, 2011 B6 epileptic encephalopathies/ seizures • Pyridoxine dependency • Pyridoxamine phosphate oxidase • Hyperprolinemia type II • Hypophosphatasia • Drugs interfering with B6 vitamer metabolism – Vigabatrin – enzyme inducing anticonvulsivants – methylxantines • Drugs reacting with PLP – Hydrazines – Penicillamine
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