| Literature DB >> 25918646 |
Mohamed S Al Riyami1, Badria Al Ghaithi1, Nadia Al Hashmi1, Naifain Al Kalbani1.
Abstract
Background. Primary hyperoxaluria belongs to a group of rare metabolic disorders with autosomal recessive inheritance. It results from genetic mutations of the AGXT gene, which is more common due to higher consanguinity rates in the developing countries. Clinical features at presentation are heterogeneous even in children from the same family; this study was conducted to determine the clinical characteristics, type of AGXT mutation, and outcome in children diagnosed with PH1 at a tertiary referral center in Oman. Method. Retrospective review of children diagnosed with PH1 at a tertiary hospital in Oman from 2000 to 2013. Result. Total of 18 children were identified. Females composed 61% of the children with median presentation age of 7 months. Severe renal failure was initial presentation in 39% and 22% presented with nephrocalcinosis and/or renal calculi. Family screening diagnosed 39% of patients. Fifty percent of the children underwent hemodialysis. 28% of children underwent organ transplantation. The most common mutation found in Omani children was c.33-34insC mutation in the AGXT gene. Conclusion. Due to consanguinity, PH1 is a common cause of ESRD in Omani children. Genetic testing is recommended to help in family counseling and helps in decreasing the incidence and disease burden; it also could be utilized for premarital screening.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25918646 PMCID: PMC4396551 DOI: 10.1155/2015/634175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
Demographic data and clinical features.
| Number | Sex | Age at presentation (months) | Type of presentation | Age at onset of ESRD (years) |
|
| ||||
| Ia | Male | 18 | NC, distal RTA, renal stone | 11 |
| Ib | Female | 18 | Family screening, NC | 6 |
| Ic | Male | 2 | ESRD | At presentation |
| IIa | Female | 12 | NC, RTA, renal stone | 11 |
| IIb | Female | 7 | ESRD | At presentation |
| IIc | Female | 2 | Family screening, NC | 8 |
| IId | Male | 2 | Family screening, NC, CKD | 4 |
| IIIa | Female | 60 | ESRD | At presentation |
| IIIb | Female | 36 | ESRD | At presentation |
| IIIC | Male | 24 | Family screening, NC | Normal RFT |
| IIId | Male | 7 | ESRD | At presentation |
| IVa | Female | 6 | NC, renal stone, UTI | 7 |
| IVb | Female | 1 | Family screening, NC | Below 1 year |
| IVc | Male | 48 | NC, polyuria | CKD |
| IVd | Female | 1 | Family screening, NC | CKD |
| IVe | Male | 4 | ESRD, NC | At presentation |
| IVf | Female | 3 | Family screening, NC | CKD |
| IVg | Female | 2 | ESRD, NC | At presentation |
Family number 1 (I), family number 2 (II), family number 3 (III), and family number 4 (IV).
ESRD: end-stage renal disease, NC: nephrocalcinosis, RTA: renal tubular acidosis, RFT: renal function test, CKD: chronic kidney disease, and UTI: urinary tract infection.
Management and outcome.
| Number | Supportive | Follow-up period (year) | RRT | Transplant | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ia | C, F, P, ESWL | 13 | HD | — | Alive |
| Ib | C, F, P | 7.5 | HD | LUL | Alive |
| Ic | C, P | 3.5 | HD | — | Died |
| IIa | C, F, P, ESWL | 13 | HD | LRL and 2 LRK | Alive |
| IIb | C, P | 2 | PD | — | Died |
| IIc | C, F, P | 9 | HD | LRL and LRK | Alive |
| IId | C, F, P | 3 | — | — | Died |
| IIIa | C, P | 4.5 | HD | — | Died |
| IIIb | C, P | 3.5 | HD | — | Died |
| IIIc | C, F, P | 4 | — | LRL | Alive |
| IIId | C, P | 2.5 | HD | — | Alive |
| IVa | C, F, P, ESWL | 9 | HD | LUL | Died |
| IVb | C, P | 1.5 | — | — | Died |
| IVc | C, F, P | 9 | Supportive | — | *47 |
| IVd | C, F, P | 1.5 | Supportive | — | *16 |
| IVe | C, P | 1 | PD | — | Died |
| IVf | C, F, P | 4 | Supportive | — | *64 |
| IVg | C, P | 2 | PD | — | Died |
Family number 1 (I), family number 2 (II), family number 3 (III), and family number 4 (IV). ESRD: end-stage renal disease, C: citrate, F: fluid, P: pyridoxine, ESWL: electric shock wave lithotripsy, CKD: chronic kidney disease, HD: hemodialysis, PD: peritoneal dialysis, LRL: living-related liver transplant, LRK: living-related kidney transplant, LUL: living-unrelated liver transplant, and *estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR mL/min/m²).
24-hour urinary oxalate, plasma oxalate, AGXT mutations and AGT activity.
| Patient | Urinary oxalate, mmol/24 h | Plasma oxalate, |
| AGT activity, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ia* | 2.440 | 65 | — | — |
| Ib | — | — | c.33-34insC | 4.7 |
| Ic* | 0.228 | — | — | — |
| IIa* | 1.309 | 41 | C.33-34insC | 2.8 |
| IIb | — | — | — | — |
| IIc* | 0.331 | 27.7 | C.33-34insC | — |
| IId* | 0.224 | 58 | — | — |
| IIIa | 0.164 | 202 | — | — |
| IIIb | 0.052 | 109 | — | 2.4 |
| IIIc* | 1.567 | — | C.33-34insC | — |
| IIId | 0.076 | 27.0 | C.33-34insC | — |
| IVa* | 0.889 | 40 | — | 4.7 |
| IVb* | 0.526 | — | c.346 G>A | — |
| IVc* | 1.538 | — | c.346 G>A | — |
| IVd* | 0.165 | — | — | — |
| IVe | 0.021 | 127.0 | — | — |
| IVf* | 0.479 | — | — | — |
| IVg | 0.072 | — | — | — |
Family number 1 (I), family number 2 (II), family number 3 (III), and familynumber 4 (IV). *24-hour oxalate >0.5 mmol/1.73 m2. Lab reference range for plasma oxalate <33 μmol/L. AGT activity reference range (19.1–47.9 μmol/h/mg); —: not done.