| Literature DB >> 24716823 |
Susanna J B Boers, Gepke Visser, Peter G P A Smit, Sabine A Fuchs1.
Abstract
Glycogen storage disease type I (GSDI), an inborn error of carbohydrate metabolism, is caused by defects in the glucose-6-transporter/glucose-6-phosphatase complex, which is essential in glucose homeostasis. Two types exist, GSDIa and GSDIb, each caused by different defects in the complex. GSDIa is characterized by fasting intolerance and subsequent metabolic derangements. In addition to these clinical manifestations, patients with GSDIb suffer from neutropenia with neutrophil dysfunction and inflammatory bowel disease.With the feasibility of novel cell-based therapies, including hepatocyte transplantations and liver stem cell transplantations, it is essential to consider long term outcomes of liver replacement therapy. We reviewed all GSDI patients with liver transplantation identified in literature and through personal communication with treating physicians. Our review shows that all 80 GSDI patients showed improved metabolic control and normal fasting tolerance after liver transplantation. Although some complications might be caused by disease progression, most complications seemed related to the liver transplantation procedure and subsequent immune suppression. These results highlight the potential of other therapeutic strategies, like cell-based therapies for liver replacement, which are expected to normalize liver function with a lower risk of complications of the procedure and immune suppression.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24716823 PMCID: PMC4113191 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-9-47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Indication and follow-up of GSDIa and GSDIb liver transplantation
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| | | |
| Hepatic adenomas or liver abnormalities (mostly focal nodular hyperplasia) | 29 [ | |
| Poor metabolic control | 27 [ | 21 [ |
| Growth retardation | 13 [ | 3 [ |
| Recurrent infections | | 10 [ |
| Renal failure | 5 [ | |
| -Of which also kidney transplant | 3 [ | |
| Bleeding complications (anemia) | 1 [ | |
| Pancreatitis | 1 [ | |
| Anal and oral ulcera | | 1 [ |
| | | |
| Cyclosporine | 12 [ | 1 [ |
| Cyclosporine + azathioprine | 17 [ | - |
| Tacrolimus | 9 [ | 16 [ |
| Not reported | 22 | 6 |
| Normalization liver function | 58 (all) | - |
| Catch-up growth | - | 13 [ |
| Sexual maturation | - | 2 [ |
| Re-OLT | 2 [ | 1 [ |
| Death | 1 (pancreatitis and sepsis) [ | 3 (rejection related liver failure, suicide, metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma) [ |
| Renal failure | 6 [ | 4 [ |
| -Of which already pre-transplant | 1 [ | |
| -Requiring dialysis | 1 [ | 2 [ |
| -Gouty arthritis (due to renal failure?) | - | 1 [ |
| Metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma | 1PC | |
| Transplantation associated | | |
| -Hepatic artery thrombosis | 2 [ | - |
| -Portal vein thrombosis | - | 2 [ |
| -Hepatic vein obstruction | 2 [ | - |
| -Prolonged drainage | 2 [ | - |
| -Rejection | 5 [ | 3 [ |
| -Never functioning liver after transplantation | 2 [ | |
| Therapy (immune suppression) associated | | |
| -Hypertension | 4 [ | - |
| -Insulin-dependent diabetes (reversible) | 3 [ | - |
| -Infections (CMV, hepatitis) | 7 [ | 1 [ |
| Normalization liver function | 23 (all) | |
| Catch-up growth | | 2 [ |
| Death | 1 (systemic candidiasis) [ | |
| Neutropenia | - | |
| -Improved | - | 14 [ |
| -Persisted | | 7 [ |
| Thrombocytopenia | | 1 [ |
| Transplantation associated | | |
| -Infection | 6 [ | - |
| -Anemia | 1 [ | - |
| -Rejection | - | 1 [ |
| Therapy (immune suppression) associated | | |
| -Infection | 1 [ | 1 [ |
| -Tacrolimus encephalopathy | 1 [ |
Follow-up of combined liver-kidney transplantation
| 1996 (2nd OLT and KT) [ | 30 | † | 1.3 years: PT died at age 31 | |
| | 1996 [ | 34 | 52 | 4.1 years: alive |
| | 2000 [ | 19.5 | 34 | 2 years: normal liver and kidney function |
| | 2004 (publication) [ | 25 | 35 | 4 months: normal liver and kidney function |
| | 2011 (publication) [ | 30 | 33 | 7 months: good condition, both grafts functional |
| 2003 (2y later OLT) [ | 32 | 41 | 8 months: good liver function and normal kidney function |
Follow-up of catch-up growth
| 1986 [ | 6 | 34 | 2 years: catch-up growth | |
| | 1987 [ | 27 | 54 | 2 years: catch-up growth (5.4 cm) |
| | 1993 [ | 11.8 | 33 | Yes: time of follow-up not mentioned |
| | Between June 1994 and December 2005 [ | median 7.3 (n = 4) | Unknown | The mean height-for-age increased from <10th percentile (at t = 0) to 50th percentile at 5 years |
| | Between 1996 and 2001 [ | 4.3-14.5 (n = 4) | 20-30 | 2 years: catch-up growth |
| | 1999 (publication) [ | 15 | 30 | 8 years: catch-up length growth (-6SD to -1.5SD) |
| | 1999 (publication) [ | 17 | 32 | 6 years: catch-up length growth (-2.5SD to -1.5SD) |
| 2004 (publication) [ | 8 | 18 | Yes: time of follow-up not mentioned | |
| 2004 (publication) [ | 11.1 | 21 | Yes: time of follow-up not mentioned |
Follow-up of therapy-associated complications
| Diabetes (n = 3) | -Acute: diabetes mellitus (1 patient) [ | |
| | | -2 days: insulin-dependent diabetes (1 patient) [ |
| | | -3 days: for following 5 days insulin pump (1 patient) [ |
| | Hypertension (n = 4) | -1 month: 4 patients, 2 received short term treatment with antihypertensive medication [ |
| | Infection (n = 8) | -Acute: CMV (2 patients) [ |
| | | -1 month: CMV (5 patients) [ |
| | | -4 years: hepatitis C (1 patient) [ |
| Infection (n = 32) | -7 months: hepatitis B (1 patients) [ | |
| | | -6.2 years: CMV (1 patient) [ |
| Encephalitis | -Acute: tacrolimus encephalitis (1 patient) [ |