| Literature DB >> 28623936 |
Kyeongsoon Kim1, Hynda K Kleinman2,3, Hahn-Jun Lee4, Kalipada Pahan5.
Abstract
Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (NCL), also known as Batten disease, is a group of genetically distinct lysosomal disorders that mainly affect the central nervous system, resulting in progressive motor and cognitive decline primarily in children. Multiple distinct genes involved in the metabolism of lipids have been identified to date with various mutations in this family of diseases. There is no cure for these diseases but some new therapeutic approaches have been tested that offer more hope than the standard palliative care. Many of the therapeutic advances require invasive procedures but some progress in slowing the disease has been found and more options can be expected in the future. We also review the literature on children with disease/conditions other than NCL for the non-invasive use, safety, and tolerability of a lipid-lowering drug, gemfibrozil, as a potential treatment for NCLs. Gemfibrozil has shown efficacy in an animal model of NCL known as CLN2 (late infantile classic juvenile) and has been shown to be safe for lowering lipids in children. Among the 200 non-NCL children found in the published literature who were treated with gemfibrozil for NCL-related problems, only 3 experienced adverse events, including 2 with muscle pain and 1 with localized linear IgA bullous dermatitis. We conclude that gemfibrozil is safe for long-term use in children, causes minimal adverse events, is well tolerated, and may delay the progression of NCLs. Gemfibrozil may potentially be an alternative to more invasive therapeutic approaches currently under investigation and has the potential to be used in combination with other therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Batten disease; CLN2; Central nervous system; Children; Gemfibrozil; Lipofuscinosis; Lopid; Lysosome biogenesis; NCL; TPP1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28623936 PMCID: PMC5474050 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-017-0663-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Scheme showing the dual mechanism of action of gemfibrozil
Effect of gemfibrozil on cells and on animals
| Treatment | Effect | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Mouse & human primary astrocytes | gemfibrozi 25 μm | ↑CLN2 mRNA ↑TPP1 protein | 38, 39 |
| Mouse neurons from cortex, striatum & hippocampus | gemfibrozil 25 μm | ↑TPP1 protein | 38 |
| Lymphoblastic cells from CLN3 patients | gemfibrozil 25 μm | ↑viability ↑autophagy recovery ↑autophagy genes | 48 |
| Human IPS models CLN2 and CLN3 mutations | gemfibrozil 25 µm | No effect on TPP1 | 47 |
| Animals | |||
| Mouse | oral gemfibrozil 7.5 mg/kg for 21 d | ↑TTP1 in astrocytes, cortical neurons, & non neural cells of dentate gyrus & CAI of hippocampus | 38 |
| Mouse KO LINCL | oral gemfibrozil 7.5 mg/kg for 21 d | ↑longevity, ↑motor retention, ↓apoptosis, ↑anti-inflammatory molecules | 49 |
d = days
Fig. 2Summary of the effects of gemfibrozil on the CLN2 knock out mouse
Safety of gemfibrozil in children
| Age | Dose (duration) | Purpose | Effect | Side effects (reference) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children with metabolic Syndrome, | 600 mg 2 x /day (8 months) | reduce lipids | ↓triglycerides | 1AE muscle pain |
| Late preterm & term neonates with jaundice | 60 mg/kg 2 doses (1 day) | reduce light therapy time, decrease bilirubin | no effect | none |
| Infants with Chylomicronemia* Syndrome, | 300 mg 2 x /day (3, 7 years) | improve jaundice | ↓pancreatitis | none (54) |
| Children with hyperlipidemia & nephrotic syndrome, | 150 mg 2 x/day (4 months) | reduce lipids | ↓cholesterol ↓triglycerides | none (50) |
| Age 13 female | 3 weeks | reduce lipids | NA | LABD (55) |
*Siblings started gemfibrozil at birth and at 6 months, respectively
LABD, linear IgA bullous dermatitis
Events related to treatment with gemfibrozil
| Causal relationship | Causal relationship | |
|---|---|---|
| Probable | Not established | |
| General: | weight loss | |
| Cardiac | extrasystoles | |
| Gastrointestinal | cholestatic jaundice | pancreatitis |
| hepatoma | ||
| colitis | ||
| Central Nervous System | dizziness | confusion |
| Somnolence | convulsions | |
| Paresthesia | syncope | |
| peripheral neuritis | ||
| decreased libido | ||
| depression | ||
| headache | ||
| Eye | blurred vision | retina edema |
| Genitourinary | impotence | decreased male fertility |
| renal dysfunction | ||
| Musculoskeletal | myopathy | |
| myasthenia | ||
| myalgia | ||
| painful extremities | ||
| arthralgia | ||
| synovitis | ||
| rhabdomyolysis | ||
| Clinical Laboratories | increased creatine | positive antinuclear antibody |
| Phosphokinase | ||
| increased bilirubin | ||
| increased liver | ||
| transaminases (AST, ALT) | ||
| increased alkaline | ||
| phosphatase | ||
| Hematopoietic | anemia | thrombocytopenia |
| leukopenia | ||
| bone marrow hypoplasia | ||
| eosinophilia | ||
| Immunologic | angioedema | anaphylaxis |
| laryngeal edema | Lupus-like syndrome | |
| urticarial | vasculitis | |
| Integumentary | exfoliative dermatitis | alopecia |
| Rash | photosensitivity | |
| dermatitis | ||
| pruritus |
SPC (Standard of Product Characteristics) of LOPID® (Gemfibrozil Tablets, USP) by Pfizer, Revised March 2016
Drug interactions with gemfibrozil
| Concomitant medication | Cautions |
|---|---|
| HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors | risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis |
| Anticoagulants | warfarin dosage should be reduced |
| CYP2C8 Substrates | drugs metabolized CYP2C8 (e.g., dabrafenib, loperamide, montelukast, paclitaxel, pioglitazone, rosiglitazone) may be required to reduce |
| OATP1B1 substrates | substrates of OATP1B1 (e.g., atrasentan, atorvastatin, bosentan, ezetimibe, fluvastatin, glyburide, SN-38 [active metabolite of irinotecan], rosuvastatin, pitavastatin, pravastatin, rifampin, valsartan, olmesartan) may be required to reduce |
| Bile Acid-Binding Resins | resin-granule drugs such as colestipol (5 g) are recommended at 2 or more hours apart |
| Colchicine | myopathy, including rhabdomyolysis in chronic administration of colchicine |
SPC of LOPID issued March.2016