Cargando…
Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood
BACKGROUND: Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is a rare metabolic disease resulting from recessive-inherited mutations in the SLC7A7 gene encoding the cationic amino-acids transporter subunit y(+)LAT1. The disease is characterised by protein-rich food intolerance with secondary urea cycle disorder...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BioMed Central
2017
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5217205/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28057010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13023-016-0550-8 |
_version_ | 1782492061700718592 |
---|---|
author | Mauhin, Wladimir Habarou, Florence Gobin, Stéphanie Servais, Aude Brassier, Anaïs Grisel, Coraline Roda, Célina Pinto, Graziella Moshous, Despina Ghalim, Fahd Krug, Pauline Deltour, Nelly Pontoizeau, Clément Dubois, Sandrine Assoun, Murielle Galmiche, Louise Bonnefont, Jean-Paul Ottolenghi, Chris de Blic, Jacques Arnoux, Jean-Baptiste de Lonlay, Pascale |
author_facet | Mauhin, Wladimir Habarou, Florence Gobin, Stéphanie Servais, Aude Brassier, Anaïs Grisel, Coraline Roda, Célina Pinto, Graziella Moshous, Despina Ghalim, Fahd Krug, Pauline Deltour, Nelly Pontoizeau, Clément Dubois, Sandrine Assoun, Murielle Galmiche, Louise Bonnefont, Jean-Paul Ottolenghi, Chris de Blic, Jacques Arnoux, Jean-Baptiste de Lonlay, Pascale |
author_sort | Mauhin, Wladimir |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is a rare metabolic disease resulting from recessive-inherited mutations in the SLC7A7 gene encoding the cationic amino-acids transporter subunit y(+)LAT1. The disease is characterised by protein-rich food intolerance with secondary urea cycle disorder, but symptoms are heterogeneous ranging from infiltrative lung disease, kidney failure to auto-immune complications. This retrospective study of all cases treated at Necker Hospital (Paris, France) since 1977 describes LPI in both children and adults in order to improve therapeutic management. RESULTS: Sixteen patients diagnosed with LPI (12 males, 4 females, from 9 families) were followed for a mean of 11.4 years (min-max: 0.4-37.0 years). Presenting signs were failure to thrive (n = 9), gastrointestinal disorders (n = 2), cytopenia (n = 6), hyperammonemia (n = 10) with acute encephalopathy (n = 4) or developmental disability (n = 3), and proteinuria (n = 1). During follow-up, 5 patients presented with acute hyperammonemia, and 8 presented with developmental disability. Kidney disease was observed in all patients: tubulopathy (11/11), proteinuria (4/16) and kidney failure (7/16), which was more common in older patients (mean age of onset 17.7 years, standard deviation 5.33 years), with heterogeneous patterns including a lupus nephritis. We noticed a case of myocardial infarction in a 34-year-old adult. Failure to thrive and signs of haemophagocytic-lymphohistiocytosis were almost constant. Recurrent acute pancreatitis occurred in 2 patients. Ten patients developed an early lung disease. Six died at the mean age of 4 years from pulmonary alveolar proteinosis. This pulmonary involvement was significantly associated with death. Age-adjusted plasma lysine concentrations at diagnosis showed a trend toward increased values in patients with a severe disease course and premature death (Wilcoxon p = 0.08; logrank, p = 0.17). Age at diagnosis was a borderline predictor of overall survival (logrank, p = 0.16). CONCLUSIONS: As expected, early pulmonary involvement with alveolar proteinosis is frequent and severe, being associated with an increased risk of death. Kidney disease frequently occurs in older patients. Cardiovascular and pancreatic involvement has expanded the scope of complications. A borderline association between increased levels of plasma lysine and poorer outome is suggested. Greater efforts at prevention are warranted to optimise the long-term management in these patients. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5217205 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | BioMed Central |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-52172052017-01-09 Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood Mauhin, Wladimir Habarou, Florence Gobin, Stéphanie Servais, Aude Brassier, Anaïs Grisel, Coraline Roda, Célina Pinto, Graziella Moshous, Despina Ghalim, Fahd Krug, Pauline Deltour, Nelly Pontoizeau, Clément Dubois, Sandrine Assoun, Murielle Galmiche, Louise Bonnefont, Jean-Paul Ottolenghi, Chris de Blic, Jacques Arnoux, Jean-Baptiste de Lonlay, Pascale Orphanet J Rare Dis Research BACKGROUND: Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is a rare metabolic disease resulting from recessive-inherited mutations in the SLC7A7 gene encoding the cationic amino-acids transporter subunit y(+)LAT1. The disease is characterised by protein-rich food intolerance with secondary urea cycle disorder, but symptoms are heterogeneous ranging from infiltrative lung disease, kidney failure to auto-immune complications. This retrospective study of all cases treated at Necker Hospital (Paris, France) since 1977 describes LPI in both children and adults in order to improve therapeutic management. RESULTS: Sixteen patients diagnosed with LPI (12 males, 4 females, from 9 families) were followed for a mean of 11.4 years (min-max: 0.4-37.0 years). Presenting signs were failure to thrive (n = 9), gastrointestinal disorders (n = 2), cytopenia (n = 6), hyperammonemia (n = 10) with acute encephalopathy (n = 4) or developmental disability (n = 3), and proteinuria (n = 1). During follow-up, 5 patients presented with acute hyperammonemia, and 8 presented with developmental disability. Kidney disease was observed in all patients: tubulopathy (11/11), proteinuria (4/16) and kidney failure (7/16), which was more common in older patients (mean age of onset 17.7 years, standard deviation 5.33 years), with heterogeneous patterns including a lupus nephritis. We noticed a case of myocardial infarction in a 34-year-old adult. Failure to thrive and signs of haemophagocytic-lymphohistiocytosis were almost constant. Recurrent acute pancreatitis occurred in 2 patients. Ten patients developed an early lung disease. Six died at the mean age of 4 years from pulmonary alveolar proteinosis. This pulmonary involvement was significantly associated with death. Age-adjusted plasma lysine concentrations at diagnosis showed a trend toward increased values in patients with a severe disease course and premature death (Wilcoxon p = 0.08; logrank, p = 0.17). Age at diagnosis was a borderline predictor of overall survival (logrank, p = 0.16). CONCLUSIONS: As expected, early pulmonary involvement with alveolar proteinosis is frequent and severe, being associated with an increased risk of death. Kidney disease frequently occurs in older patients. Cardiovascular and pancreatic involvement has expanded the scope of complications. A borderline association between increased levels of plasma lysine and poorer outome is suggested. Greater efforts at prevention are warranted to optimise the long-term management in these patients. BioMed Central 2017-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5217205/ /pubmed/28057010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13023-016-0550-8 Text en © The Author(s). 2017 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. |
spellingShingle | Research Mauhin, Wladimir Habarou, Florence Gobin, Stéphanie Servais, Aude Brassier, Anaïs Grisel, Coraline Roda, Célina Pinto, Graziella Moshous, Despina Ghalim, Fahd Krug, Pauline Deltour, Nelly Pontoizeau, Clément Dubois, Sandrine Assoun, Murielle Galmiche, Louise Bonnefont, Jean-Paul Ottolenghi, Chris de Blic, Jacques Arnoux, Jean-Baptiste de Lonlay, Pascale Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
title | Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
title_full | Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
title_fullStr | Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
title_full_unstemmed | Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
title_short | Update on Lysinuric Protein Intolerance, a Multi-faceted Disease Retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
title_sort | update on lysinuric protein intolerance, a multi-faceted disease retrospective cohort analysis from birth to adulthood |
topic | Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5217205/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28057010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13023-016-0550-8 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT mauhinwladimir updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT habarouflorence updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT gobinstephanie updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT servaisaude updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT brassieranais updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT griselcoraline updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT rodacelina updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT pintograziella updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT moshousdespina updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT ghalimfahd updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT krugpauline updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT deltournelly updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT pontoizeauclement updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT duboissandrine updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT assounmurielle updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT galmichelouise updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT bonnefontjeanpaul updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT ottolenghichris updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT deblicjacques updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT arnouxjeanbaptiste updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood AT delonlaypascale updateonlysinuricproteinintoleranceamultifaceteddiseaseretrospectivecohortanalysisfrombirthtoadulthood |