| Literature DB >> 27908292 |
Maria Salomon-Estebanez1,2, Sarah E Flanagan3, Sian Ellard3, Lindsey Rigby4, Louise Bowden4, Zainab Mohamed5, Jacqueline Nicholson6, Mars Skae4, Caroline Hall7, Ross Craigie8, Raja Padidela4, Nuala Murphy9, Tabitha Randell5, Karen E Cosgrove10, Mark J Dunne10, Indraneel Banerjee4,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with Congenital Hyperinsulinism (CHI) due to mutations in K-ATP channel genes (K-ATP CHI) are increasingly treated by conservative medical therapy without pancreatic surgery. However, the natural history of medically treated K-ATP CHI has not been described; it is unclear if the severity of recessively and dominantly inherited K-ATP CHI reduces over time. We aimed to review variation in severity and outcomes in patients with K-ATP CHI treated by medical therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Congenital hyperinsulinism; Diazoxide; Genetics; Hypoglycaemia; Insulin; Mutations; Neurodevelopment; Octreotide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27908292 PMCID: PMC5133749 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0547-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Patient characteristics
| Patient | Current Age (years) | Age at presentation | Resolved at (years) | Focal/Diffuse | Mutation | Maximum Medication dose | Current Medication dose | Feeding method | Neurodevelopment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | 5.3 | Neonate | 2.6 | Diffuse | Compound heterozygous | DZX 5 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Speech delay |
| #2 | 9.3 | Neonate | 3.5 | Diffuse | Maternal | DZX 10 mg/kg/d | 0 | Gastrostomy (4 years) | Speech delay |
| #3 | 16.6 | Neonate | 13 | Diffuse |
| DZX 7 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Normal |
| #4 | 9.4 | Neonate | 0.7 | Diffuse | Maternal | DZX 9.2 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Seizures at presentation, behavioural problems |
| #5 | 4.3 | Neonate | 3.1 | Diffuse | Maternal | DZX 7.1 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Normal |
| #6 | 0.7 | Neonate | 0.4 | Diffuse | Paternal | DZX 5 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Normal |
| #7 | 6.7 | Day 2 | 0.5 | Diffuse | Maternal | DZX 5 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Epilepsy, motor delay, coordination problems |
| #8 | 2.7 | Day 2 | 0.2 | Diffuse | Maternal | DZX 5 mg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Normal |
| #9 | 7.2 | Day 1 | 6 | Diffuse | Homozygous | OCT 18.5 mcg/kg/d; Somatuline 60 mg 4-7 weekly | 0 | Gastrostomy (2.5 years) | Normal |
| #10 | 2.7 | Day 1 | 1.6 | Focal | Paternal | OCT 15 mcg/kg/d | 0 | Gastrostomy (1.3 years) | Normal |
| #11 | 10.9 | 8 months | 6.6 | Focal | Paternal | OCT 19 mcg/kg/d | 0 | Orally | Normal |
| #12 | 7.1 | Day 1 | 7 | Diffuse | Compound heterozygous | OCT 14.5 mcg/kg/d | 0 | Gastrostomy (3.6 years) | Normal |
| #13 | 5.7 | Day 1 | 1.9 | Diffuse | Paternal | OCT 3.8 mcg/kg/d | 0 | Gastrostomy (1.7 years) | Normal |
| #14 | 12.3 | Day 1 | 9 | Diffuse | Homozygous | OCT 19.2 mcg/kg/d | 0 | Gastrostomy (1.2 years) | Mild gross motor, speech delay |
| #15 | 7.6 | Day 70 | 5.5 | Diffuse | Presumed paternal | OCT 17 mcg/kg/d | 0 | Gastrostomy (2.0 years) | Normal |
| #16 | 8.9 | Day 5 | Not resolved | Diffuse | Paternal | DZX 10 mg/kg/d | DZX 6 mg/kg/d | Orally | Epilepsy, speech, motor, learning difficulties |
| #17 | 1.1 | Day1 | Not resolved | Diffuse | Homozygous | DZX 10 mg/kg/d | DZX 0.5 mg/kg/d | Orally | Normal |
| #18 | 1.3 | Day 2 | Not resolved | Diffuse | Paternal | DZX 8.5 mg/kg/d | DZX 5.8 mg/kg/d | Orally | Normal |
| #19 | 5.1 | Neonate | Not resolved | Diffuse |
| DZX 15 mg/kg/d | DZX 10.8 mg/kg/d | Gastrostomy (continuing at present) | Normal |
| #20 | 6.8 | Day 2 | Not resolved | Diffuse | Maternal | DZX 9.6 mg/kg/d | DZX 3.1 mg/kg/d | Orally | Epilepsy, motor delay, behavioural problems |
| #21 | 3.2 | Day 1 | Not resolved | Diffuse | Paternal | DZX 12.5 mg/kg/d | DZX 5 mg/kg/d | Gastrostomy (overnight only, continuing) | Speech delay |
Patient characteristics in this cohort of patients with medically treated K-ATP CHI (n = 21), showing age at presentation, resolution status, diffuse/focal, medication dosage (DZX - diazoxide, OCT - octreotide), feeding practices and neurodevelopmental status. The type of genetic mutation (see also Table 2) has no correlation with resolution status of CHI. The mutation in patient #16 has also been classified as a variant [8]
Genetic characterisation of patients with medically treated K-ATP CHI
| Patient | Mutation | Paternal | Maternal |
| Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Large deletion/Missense |
|
| Deletion is novel, A355T reported in Ismail (2010) [ | |
| #2 | Missense |
| Arya (2014) [ | ||
| #3 | Missense |
| Aguilar-Bryan (1999) [ | ||
| #4 | Missense |
| Banerjee (2011) [ | ||
| #5 | Missense |
| Pinney (2008) [ | ||
| #6 | Missense |
| Ayra (2014) [ | ||
| #7 | Missense |
| Nestorowicz (1998) [ | ||
| #8 | Missense |
| Banerjee (2011) [ | ||
| #9 | Splicing/Splicing |
|
| Powell (2011) [ | |
| #10 | Missense |
| Snider (2013) [ | ||
| #11 | Splicing |
| Ohkubo (2005) [ | ||
| #12 | Missense/Nonsense |
|
| G70R: Banerjee (2011) [ | |
| #13 | Missense |
| Suchi (2006) [ | ||
| #14 | Splicing/Splicing |
|
| Powell (2011) [ | |
| #15 | Missense |
| Suchi (2006) [ | ||
| #16 | Missense |
| Coventry (2010) [ | ||
| #17 | Missense/Missense |
|
| Sogno Valin (2013) [ | |
| #18 | Missense |
| Novel | ||
| #19 | Missense |
| Pinney (2008) [ | ||
| #20 | Missense |
| Fernandez-Marmiesse (2006) [ | ||
| #21 | Missense |
| Bennett (2015) [ |
Genetic characterisation of patients with medically treated K-ATP CHI, showing gene defect, protein changes, type of mutation, mode of inheritance and citations (see references). *The p.G40D mutation is presumed to be of paternal origin. The mutation was not present in the sample from the mother and the father was unavailable for testing. The mutation in patient #16 has been classified in other publications as a variant of uncertain significance
Fig. 1Maximum and present doses of diazoxide in children with CHI represented as box and whisker plots (median, 95% confidence intervals). In persistent CHI (CHI-Persistent), a higher maximal dose of diazoxide was required than in patients with resolved CHI (CHI-Resolved). Diazoxide dose was reduced both in CHI-Resolved and CHI-Persistent groups of patients
Fig. 2Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, 2nd edition (VABS-II) scores as standard deviation scores (SDS) for patients with persistent CHI (CHI-Persistent) and resolved CHI (CHI-Resolved), represented as box and whisker plots (median, 95% confidence intervals). Total SDS scores representing the Adaptive Behavior Composite (ABC) are shown in white boxes while individual domains are depicted in colour