| Literature DB >> 25205257 |
Matthias R Baumgartner, Friederike Hörster, Carlo Dionisi-Vici, Goknur Haliloglu, Daniela Karall, Kimberly A Chapman, Martina Huemer, Michel Hochuli, Murielle Assoun, Diana Ballhausen, Alberto Burlina, Brian Fowler, Sarah C Grünert, Stephanie Grünewald, Tomas Honzik, Begoña Merinero, Celia Pérez-Cerdá, Sabine Scholl-Bürgi, Flemming Skovby, Frits Wijburg, Anita MacDonald, Diego Martinelli, Jörn Oliver Sass, Vassili Valayannopoulos, Anupam Chakrapani.
Abstract
Methylmalonic and propionic acidemia (MMA/PA) are inborn errors of metabolism characterized by accumulation of propionic acid and/or methylmalonic acid due to deficiency of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MUT) or propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC). MMA has an estimated incidence of ~ 1: 50,000 and PA of ~ 1:100'000 -150,000. Patients present either shortly after birth with acute deterioration, metabolic acidosis and hyperammonemia or later at any age with a more heterogeneous clinical picture, leading to early death or to severe neurological handicap in many survivors. Mental outcome tends to be worse in PA and late complications include chronic kidney disease almost exclusively in MMA and cardiomyopathy mainly in PA. Except for vitamin B12 responsive forms of MMA the outcome remains poor despite the existence of apparently effective therapy with a low protein diet and carnitine. This may be related to under recognition and delayed diagnosis due to nonspecific clinical presentation and insufficient awareness of health care professionals because of disease rarity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25205257 PMCID: PMC4180313 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-014-0130-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Figure 1Metabolic interrelationship of MMA and PA.
Evidence levels were classified in accordance with the SIGN methodology
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| 1++ | High quality meta-analyses, systematic reviews of randomized control trials (RCTs), or RCTs with a very low risk of bias. |
| 1+ | Well conducted meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCTs, or RCTs with a low risk of bias. |
| 1− | Meta-analyses, systematic reviews or RCTs, or RCTs with a high risk of bias. |
| 2++ | High quality systematic reviews of case-control or cohort studies or high quality case-control or cohort studies with a very low risk of confounding bias, or chance and a high probability that the relationship is causal. |
| 2+ | Well conducted case-control or cohort studies with a low risk of confounding, bias, or chance and a moderate probability that the relationship is causal. |
| 2− | Case-control or cohort studies with a high risk of confounding, bias, or chance and a significant risk that the relationship is not causal. |
| 3 | Non-analytic studies, e.g. case reports, case series. |
| 4 | Expert opinion. |
Grading of recommendations depending on their level of evidence
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| A | If level 1 evidence was found (not the case in this study). |
| B | If level 2 evidence was found. |
| C | If level 3 evidence was found (mainly non-analytical studies such as case reports and case series). |
| D | If level 4 evidence was found (mainly expert opinion). |
Acute and chronic presentations of MMA/PA
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bold: typical signs and symptoms.
standard: uncommon signs and symptoms.
italics: signs and symptoms only reported in single patients.
Grade of recommendation: D.
Bedside differential diagnostics of inborn errors of metabolism presenting with acute encephalopathy (modified from Haeberle et al. [14])
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| ↑ NH3 | ++ | + | – | – | +/– | + | + | +/– | – |
| Acidosis | +/– | + | ++ | – | +/– | + | – | + | + |
| Ketonuriaa | – | ++/+++ | +++ | +/++ | – | – | – | +/++ | – |
| Hypoglycemiab | – | +/– | – | – | + | + | ++ | +/– | – |
| ↑ Lactic acidc | – | + | + | – | +/– | + | – | ++ | ++ |
| ↑ AST & ALT | (+) | +/– | – | – | ++ | +/– | – | +/– | – |
| ↑ CPK | – | – | – | – | ++ | – | – | +/– | – |
| ↑ Uric acid | – | + | + | + | + | + | – | +/– | +/– |
| ↓ WBC/RBC/Plt | – | + | – | – | – | – | – | +/– | – |
| Weight loss | – | +d | + | +/– | – | – | – | + | – |
Non-standard abbreviations include: MSUD, maple syrup urine disease; HMG-CoA lyase, 3-hydroxy-3-methlyglutaryl-CoA lyase; HIHA, Hyperinsulinism-hyperammonemia syndrome; PC, pyruvate carboxylase; PDH, pyruvate dehydrogenase.
aKetonuria (++ - +++) suggests OA in neonates.
bHypoglycemia and hyperammonemia (“pseudo-Reye”) are predominant in 3-HMG-CoA-lyase deficiency (more than in PC deficiency).
cLactic acid elevation refers to a plasma lactate > 6 mmol/l; lower levels of 2-6 mM may be due to violent crying or extensive muscle activity.
dOnly in neonates.
eOnly type B associated with hyperammonemia but not types A and C.
Grade of recommendation: D.
Frequencies of signs & symptoms reported in MMA/PA
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| 25-65% | 59-100% | [ | [ |
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| Frequent during metabolic crises, but no specific data | 21-30% | [ | [ |
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| No data | 56-100% | [ | |
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| 16-53% | 25-53% | [ | [ |
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| 30-45% | 40% | [ | [ |
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| Up to 35% | >10 cases | [ | [ |
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| Single cases | >10 cases | [ | [ |
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| Rare | rare | [ | [ |
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| 28-47% | 4 cases | [ | [ |
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| Few cases | 9-23% | [ | [ |
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| Not reported | 37 cases | [ | |
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| 22 cases | 7 cases | [ | [ |
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| Rare | rare | [ | [ |
Management of symptomatic hyperammonemia in undiagnosed patients and known patients with MMA/PA
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| Increased > upper limit of normal |
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| 100-250* |
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| 250-500 |
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| 500-1000 |
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| >1000 |
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*This limit of action applies for patients outside the neonatal period; for neonates use >150 and <250.
#Monitor blood glucose after 30 min and subsequently every hour, because some neonates are very sensitive to insulin.
§1 g sodium benzoate and sodium phenyl butyrate contain 7 mmol Na and 5.4 mmol Na, respectively.
Grade of recommendation: C-D.
Dosage of drugs in acute hyperammonemia
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| Age dependent (see Table | 100 mg/kg as bolus, then maintenance 100 mg/kg/d | 1 mg/day | 10 - 40 mg/day | 250 mg/kg as bolus in 90-120 min, then maintenance dose 250 mg/kg/d | 250 mg/kg as bolus in 90-120 min, then maintenance dose 250 mg/kg/d | 250 mg/kg as bolus in 90-120 min, then maintenance dose 250 mg/kg/d | 100 mg/kg bolus, then 25-62 mg/kg every 6 h |
#Vitamin B12 is preferably given in the form of hydroxocobalamin; cyanocobalamin is less efficient but may be used temporarily.
*Maximal daily drug dosages: sodium benzoate 5, 5 g/m2or 12 g/d, sodium PBA 5, 5 g/m2or 12 g/d, L-arginine 12 g/day.
°Sodium phenylbutyrate should only be used in urea cycle defects or when the cause of hyperammonemia is unknown. In severe acute decompensation both sodium benzoate and sodium PBA/phenylacetate should be given in parallel as “ultima ratio”. In less severe cases, a stepwise approach with initial sodium benzoate and if hyperammonemia persists or worsens, the addition of sodium PBA/phenylacetate can be chosen.
§Arginine should only be used when the cause of hyperammonemia is unknown or when plasma arginine is low.
Grade of recommendation: D.
Age-dependent glucose requirement (mg/kg/min)
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| 8-10 | 7-8 | 6-7 | 5-6 | 4-5 | 3-4 |
Triggers, clinical signs & symptoms and biochemical signs of acute decompensation in MMA/PA*
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| Infection | Poor feeding | Metabolic acidosis (pH <7.3, anion gap >20 mmol/l, low pCO2 or base excess greater than -5 mmol/l) |
| Fever | Vomiting | |
| Prolonged fasting | Lethargy | Elevated blood lactate (>3 mmol/l) |
| Medication (e.g. chemotherapy, high dose glucocorticoids) | Hypotonia | Hyperammonemia |
| Prolonged or intense physical exercise, surgery and/or general anesthesia | Irritability | Ketonuria (greater than trace in infants or greater than + in children) |
| Acute trauma, significant hemorrhage | Respiratory distress | Uric acid and/or elevated urinary urea (urea/creatinine > 20) as signs of catabolism |
| Psychological stress | Hypothermia | Neutropenia |
| Excessive protein intake | Dehydration and weight loss | Thrombocytopenia |
*Please note that columns are independent from each other. Thus a given line in a column does not refer to the line in the neighboring column.
Grade of recommendation: D.
Nutritional composition of home emergency feeds in infants and children
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| Up to 12 m | Stop or reduce total protein intake by ≥50% depending on illness severity | 10 | 3.5 | 72 | 302 | 120 -150 ml/kg | Continuous tube feds using enteral feeding pump |
| 1-2 y | 15 | 5 | 105 | 441 | 1200 ml | ||
| 2-9 y | 20 | 5 | 125 | 525 | Estimated as indicated | ||
| >10 y | 25 | 5 | 145 | 609 | Estimated as indicated |
For children >10 kg emergency regimen fluid requirements can be calculated as:
11–20 kg: 100 ml/kg for the first 10 kg, plus 50 ml/kg for the next 10 kg.
>20 kg: 100 ml/kg for the first 10 kg, plus 50 ml/kg for the next 10 kg, plus 25 ml/kg thereafter.
up to a maximum of 2500 ml/day.
*Fat emulsion (50%) is based on a long chain fatty acid source. Fat may not be well tolerated during illness and so may be omitted from emergency feed.
Grade of recommendation: D.
FAO/WHO/UNU 2007 safe levels of protein and energy intake for different age groups
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| Males | Females | Males | Females | Infants (y) | |
| 0.5 | 335 | 340 | 80.0 | 81.2 | 0.1 | 1.77 |
| 0.2 | 1.5 | |||||
| 0.25 | 1.36 | |||||
| 0.5-1 | 1.31 | |||||
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| 2.5 | 348 | 334 | 83.1 | 79.8 | 1-10 | 0.84-0.90 |
| 5.0 | 315 | 305 | 75.2 | 72.8 | ||
| 10 | 275 | 248 | 65.7 | 59.2 | ||
| 15 | 230 | 193 | 54.9 | 46.1 | 11-16 | 0.92-1.14 |
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| 18-29 | 183 | 159 | 43.7 | 38.0 | >16 | 0.84-0.87 |
| 30-59 | 175 | 148 | 41.8 | 35.3 | ||
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| 18-29 | 212 | 180 | 50.6 | 43.0 | ||
| 30-59 | 212 | 183 | 50.6 | 43.7 | ||
*The FAO/WHO/UNU (2007) have set safe levels of protein intake titrated as an age adjusted mean + 2 SD. Values for safe levels of protein intake apply to males and females.
Metabolic follow-up, monitoring of diet and nutritional status, and long term complications
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| NH3, blood gases, lactate | Each clinic visit |
| Quantitative plasma amino acids (3-4 h fasting) | Every 3-6 months |
| MMA plasma and urine | Every 3-6 months |
| Free carnitine plasma (or dried blood spots) | Every 6-12 months |
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| Diet history | Each clinic visit |
| Growth (weight, length/height, BMI) | Each clinic visit |
| Clinical examination e.g. skin, hair | Each clinic visit |
| Albumin, pre-albumin | Every 6 months |
| Bone health (calcium, phosphorus, alkaline phosphatase, magnesium, parathyroid hormone, 25-OH vitamin D) | Annually, more frequently in case of chronic kidney disease |
| FBC, zinc, selenium, ferritin, folic acid, vitamin B12 | Annually |
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| Neurological examination with detailed history of developmental milestones | Each clinic visit |
| Kidney function (glomerular and tubular function)* (serum creatinine, urea, electrolytes, cystatin C, uric acid, urinary electrolytes and protein loss, GFR) | Biochemistry, urine: every 6 mo* GFR*: annually, beginning at 6 y or earlier, if other renal function markers are abnormal |
| Pancreas (amylase &lipase) | Every 6 months |
| Heart (ECG, echocardiography) | Baseline ➔ annually, start at 6 y |
| Formal developmental/IQ assessment | At defined ages |
| Ophthalmologic assessment | Annually after 6 y |
| EEG, MRI, formal hearing test | If clinical suspicion/indication |
| Dentist/oral care | Regularly |
*Monitoring of kidney function should be performed every 6 months in MMA; in PA annual monitoring is sufficient and GFR measurement is only indicated if other renal function markers are abnormal.
Grade of recommendation: D.
Considerations and management of general anesthesia
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| - Check that the child is healthy 48 hours before surgery. If not, postpone the operation. | - Seek specialist advice |
| - Last metabolic work-up must have taken place less than 3 months | - On admission |
| • Check plasma ammonia, pH, blood gases | |
| • If ammonia >100 μmol/l, pH < 7.30 or base deficit > 10 mmol/l) or the child is unwell, cancel elective procedures and/or seek specialist advice | |
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| - Stop feeds according to minimal anesthetic requirements and replace by clear carbohydrate containing fluids or intravenous 10% glucose and appropriate electrolytes at a rate allowing to block lipolysis: | |
| • 8-10 mg/kg/min for neonates and infants | |
| • 6-7 mg/kg/min for children | |
| • 5-6 mg/kg/min for adolescents | |
| • 4-5 mg/kg/min for adults | |
| - For B12 responsive patients administer hydroxocobalamin 1mg parenterally 24 h before and on the day of the procedure | |
| - Add intravenous L-carnitine: 100 mg/kg/ day (max. 12 g for adults) | |
| The infusion and treatment should be maintained during the whole surgical procedure. The use of intravenous lipid solution may be considered for longer procedures (1 to 2 g/kg/day IV). | |
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| - Following the operation, feed depending on metabolic stability at the time you would feed any other patient following an equivalent procedure. | |
| - Give whatever oral medicines the patient may be due at the same time | |
| - Discontinue the intravenous infusion ONLY after the child has been seen to tolerate food. | |
| - Remove the cannula ONLY when normal feeding has been achieved. | |
| - If recovery is delayed or complicated by vomiting: | |
| • check blood gases, electrolytes and ammonia | |
| • consider using antiemetic drugs (ondansetron, avoid metoclopramide) | |
| • continue glucose and L-carnitine infusion and add IV lipids (1-2 g/kg/d) | |
| • IV amino acids should be added if the patient cannot be fed (0.5-0.8 g/kg/d) | |
| - Discharge ONLY after full recovery and normal metabolic results. This will often be the following day. | |
Figure 2Neuroimaging finding in MMA: Male child with MMA (cblA defect). An MRI study was obtained at the age of 6 months because of irritability, feeding difficulties, developmental delay, encephalopathy and metabolic decompensation. The caudate and lentiform nuclei are swollen and hyperintense on axial T2-weighted (W) turbo spin-echo (SE) image (A) with restricted diffusion suggested by hyperintensity on trace diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) (B) and low signals on ADC map (C). Proton MR spectroscopy (TE:135ms) performed from the lesions reveals decreased N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), increased choline (Cho) and presence of lactate (D).
Figure 3Neuroimaging finding in MMA: Male child with MMA (cblA defect). Follow-up MR imaging 6 months after acute deterioration shows residual T2 hyperintensity in the caudate nuclei and necrosis in the lentiform nuclei with reversal of abnormalities in the globus pallidi (A). There is CSF-like unrestricted diffusion in the lentiform nuclei on DWI (B) and ADC map (C) and elevated Cho on MR spectroscopy (D).
Figure 4Neuroimaging finding in PA: Male child with PA, symptomatic from day 4 of life, diagnosed at the age of 4 months. An MRI was obtained at the age of 5 years when he developed acute encephalopathy. Cerebral cortices especially of the temporal and occipital lobes and the basal ganglia (caudate and lentiform nuclei) are swollen and mildly hyperintense on axial T2W TSE (A). Hyperintensity on trace DWI (B) and low intensity on ADC maps (C) suggestive of restricted diffusion are seen in those affected regions.
Figure 5Neuroimaging finding in PA: Male child with PA, symptomatic from day 4 of life, diagnosed at the age of 4 months. A week later a repeat MR study showed more intense T2 signal changes in the involved regions, more prominent in the putamina (A). Although a higher signal intensity of the cortices and basal ganglia on trace DWI (B), with disappearance of low signal of the cortices and presence of higher signal intensity on ADC maps (C) there’s pseudonormalization of diffusion restriction.