| Literature DB >> 29391017 |
Jennifer M Kwon1, Dietrich Matern2, Joanne Kurtzberg3, Lawrence Wrabetz4, Michael H Gelb5, David A Wenger6, Can Ficicioglu7, Amy T Waldman8, Barbara K Burton9, Patrick V Hopkins10, Joseph J Orsini11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Krabbe disease is a rare neurodegenerative genetic disorder caused by deficiency of galactocerebrosidase. Patients with the infantile form of Krabbe disease can be treated at a presymptomatic stage with human stem cell transplantation which improves survival and clinical outcomes. However, without a family history, most cases of infantile Krabbe disease present after onset of symptoms and are ineligible for transplantation. In 2006, New York began screening newborns for Krabbe disease to identify presymptomatic cases. To ensure that those identified with infantile disease received timely treatment, New York public health and medical systems took steps to accurately diagnose and rapidly refer infants for human stem cell transplantation within the first few weeks of life. After 11 years of active screening in New York and the introduction of Krabbe disease newborn screening in other states, new information has been gained which can inform the design of newborn screening programs to improve infantile Krabbe disease outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Confirmatory testing; Galactocerebrosidase; Guidelines; Human stem cell transplantation; Infantile Krabbe disease; Krabbe disease; Lysosomal storage disorder; Newborn screening; Psychosine
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29391017 PMCID: PMC5796396 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-018-0766-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Recommended flow of KD-NBS with optimal times of events, such as receipt of specimen and referral to specialty care center, indicated by number of days of life. The labels, “Q1-Q3,” highlight the key questions 1-3 (see text) being addressed in this evidence review. DOL is infant age in days of life. Additional figure abbreviations: NBS = newborn screening; HSCT = human stem cell transplantation
DBS based GALC enzyme assays for KD-NBS
| Assay Platform | MS/MS | MS/MS | Fluorometry |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marker | GALC activity | GALC activity | GALC activity |
| Substrate | Synthetic analog of galactosylceramide containing a C8-fatty acyl chain; after incubation with GALC, releases novel ceramide | Synthetic analog of galactosylceramide containing a C7-fatty acyl chain; after incubation with GALC, releases novel ceramide | Artificial fluorogenic compound; after incubation with GALC, releases 4-MU analog that is measured fluorometrically |
| States using assay | -* | IL, KY, NY, OH | MO |
| Reference | [ | [ | [ |
*Reagents have been discontinued
Second tier testing methods in KD NBS
| Test Method | Rationale | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 kb deletion testing | Known pathogenic mutation, common in IKD patients | Low complexity, rapid assay. When found homozygous indicates IKD. | Rare mutation, whose presence is more likely to indicate carrier status (i.e. “false positive”) and where the absence will still not avoid possible IKD (“false negative”) |
| Psychosine testing | Appears to be associated with active disease in KD patients | Rapid test that when elevated indicates IKD. | Requires MS/MS equipment with higher sensitivity than that typically used in NBS labs but testing can be regionalized while still ensuring rapid turnaround time. |
| With 30kbDel, it is traditionally considered the “gold standard” 2nd tier testing in KD-NBS, but there may still be GALC deletions missed, leading to false negative results. | Can identify those infants at highest risk for IKD. Provides some reassurance to those who are carriers, have only enzyme lowering polymorphisms, or known “mild” mutations. | Instrumentation and expertise required are beyond the capabilities of most NBS labs. |
Summary of previously reported data from NYa comparing IKD infants’ diagnostic results and outcomes to the 8 considered at high risk to develop KD (but who are asymptomatic to date)
| Patienta | WBC GALCa(nmol/h/mg) | psychosineb | Age at HSCTa | HSCT Centerc | Outcomea | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IKD | 1 | 30kbDel//p.I546T + p.X670Qext*42 | 0.01 | 28.0 | 32 days | A | Alive, significant delays but interactive |
| 2 | 30kbDel//30kbDel | 0.05 | 32.2 | 31 days | A | Death | |
| 3 | 30kbDel//30kbDel | 0.02 | 38.1 | refused | – | Death | |
| 4 | 30kbDel// p.G360Dfs*2 | 0.12 | 60 | 41 days | B | Alive, severe delays, minimally interactive | |
| 5 | 30kbDel//30kbDel | 0.05 | 53.1 | 24 days | B | Death | |
| High risk for KDa | Bi-allelic pathogenic GALC mutations | Range: 0.03-0.12 | Range: 0.21-2.7 | Currently, all continue to do well and have had no symptoms requiring additional referrals (follow-up ranging from 1 to 9 years, J. Orsini, personal communication) | |||
aSee articles on the NY state experience with KD NBS [5, 6] for more detailed information
bPsychosine values reported separately by Escolar et al. [20]; assignment of psychosine values to appropriate infant performed by J. Orsini
cHSCT Center: “A” centers have 5 or more years or experience with HSCT in young children with inherited metabolic conditions, and they have transplanted at least one patient with presymptomatic IKD in 5 years. Other HSCT programs are labelled “B”
Schedule of HSCT Center tasks for infants with IKD requiring HSCT. These are the steps to be taken after: 1) KD-NBS and confirmatory testing established a diagnosis of IKD, 2) diagnosis and care options were discussed with the family
| 1. Refer to transplant center ASAP (DOL 5-6) (Fig. |
| 2. HSCT Center helps to arrange insurance coverage, lodging, admission for work up |
| 3.Baby admitted to HSCT Center (DOL 7-8): |
| a. Blood drawn for stat HLA typing (high resolution Class I ABC, Class II DRB1), and studies, including, blood type, and psychosine |
| b. Maternal blood for donor screening tests |
| c. CSF for protein, cell count |
| d. Neuroimaging tests: MRI brain with DTI |
| e. Neurophysiological tests: EEG, BAER, VEP, nerve conduction tests |
| f. Neurology and neurodevelopmental consult |
| g. Hearing and vision evaluations |
| h. Echocardiogram to check for PFO or PDA. If present, filter IV lines to prevent air emboli |
| i. Physical therapy consultation |
| j. When HLA typing is available, search for an unrelated cord blood unit donor, select units (> 4/6 match and > 5×10e7 cells/kg for HLA-confirmatory typing and GAL-C enzyme levels) to be used for final unit selection |
| k. Proceed with insurance/third party payer authorization for transplantation |
| l. Place central line and consider G-Tube placement for supplemental feeding |
| m. Administer chemotherapy (currently 9 days) |
| n. Make final cord blood unit selection during chemotherapy |
| o. Administer transplant (DOL 21+) |