| Literature DB >> 30453665 |
Maria João Pena1, Alex Pinto2,3, Anne Daly4, Anita MacDonald5, Luís Azevedo6,7,8, Júlio César Rocha9,10,11, Nuno Borges12,13.
Abstract
In phenylketonuria (PKU), synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids (AAs) is essential in a low-phenylalanine (Phe) diet. Glycomacropeptide (GMP), an intact protein, is very low in Phe in its native form. It has been modified and adapted for PKU to provide an alternative protein source through supplementation with rate-limiting amino acids (GMP-AAs), although it still contains residual Phe. This review aims to systematically evaluate published intervention studies on the use of GMP-AAs in PKU by considering its impact on blood Phe control (primary aim) and changes in tyrosine control, nutritional biomarkers, and patient acceptability or palatability (secondary aims). Four electronic databases were searched for articles published from 2007 to June 2018. Of the 274 studies identified, only eight were included. Bias risk was assessed and a quality appraisal of the body of evidence was completed. A meta-analysis was performed with two studies with adequate comparable methodology which showed no differences between GMP-AAs and AAs for any of the interventions analysed. This work underlines the scarcity and nature of studies with GMP-AAs interventions. All were short-term with small sample sizes. There is a need for better-designed studies to provide the best evidence-based recommendations.Entities:
Keywords: acceptability; amino acids; glycomacropeptide; metabolic control; nutritional biomarkers; phenylalanine; phenylketonuria
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30453665 PMCID: PMC6266274 DOI: 10.3390/nu10111794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) study flow diagram describing process of study selection. Reviews or preclinical studies (defined as not providing clinical outcome data) and abstracts were excluded. Full-text articles that provided no outcome of interest were also excluded.
Characteristics of studies included in the systematic review.
| Author, Year (Ref.) | Country | Study Design | Sample Size ( | Age (Range)—Years | Gender | PKU Phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lim et al. 2007 [ | United States | Cross-sectional study | 49 | 12–42 | N/A | N/A |
| van Calcar et al. 2009 [ | United States | Crossover clinical study | 11 | 23 ± 7 (11–31) | 4 F; 7 M | 10 classical; 1 variant form |
| MacLeod et al. 2010 [ | United States | Crossover clinical study | 11 | 23 ± 7 (11–31) | 4 F; 7 M | 11 classical |
| Zaki et al. 2016 [ | Egypt | Clinical study | 10 | 6.73 [5.02; 11.79] | 4 F; 6 M | 10 classical |
| Ney et al. 2016 [ | United States | Randomised crossover clinical trial | 30 | 15–49 | 18 F; 12 M | 20 classical; 10 variant form |
| Daly et al. 2017 [ | United Kingdom | Clinical study | 22 | 11 (6–16) | 9 F; 13 M | N/A |
| Pinto et al. 2017 [ | Portugal | Retrospective, longitudinal study | 11 | 27 ± 10 (13–42) | 8 F; 3 M | 6 classical; 4 mild; 1 HPA |
| Ahring et al. 2018 [ | Denmark | Randomised crossover clinical trial | 8 1 | 33.25 ± 11.21 (15–48) | 7 F; 1 M | 8 classical |
F: female; HPA: hyperphenylalaninemia; M: male; N/A: not available; PKU: phenylketonuria. Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation or median [interquartile range]. 1 Initial sample size was of eight patients but only six patients completed the study.
Characteristics of treatment and outcome measures of the included studies.
| Author, Year (Ref.) | Length of Intervention | Intervention | Comparator | Primary Outcome | Secondary Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lim et al. 2007 [ | N/A | GMP-AAs | AAs | N/A | Acceptability * |
| van Calcar et al. 2009 [ | Two treatments for four days each: AAs (days 1–4) and GMP-AAs (days 5–8) | Period I—0% GMP-AAs; Period II—100% GMP-AAs; 11 patients | Period I—100% AAs; Period II—0% AAs; 11 patients | Blood Phe | Blood Tyr |
| MacLeod et al. 2010 [ | Two treatments for four days each: AAs (days 1–4) and GMP-AAs (days 5–8) | Period I—0% GMP-AAs; Period II—100% GMP-AAs; 11 patients | Period I—100% AAs; Period II—0% AAs; 11 patients | Blood Phe | Blood Tyr |
| Zaki et al. 2016 [ | Eighteen weeks | Period I—50% GMP; Period II—0% GMP; 10 patients | Period I—50% AAs; Period II—100% AAs; 10 patients | Blood Phe | Urea/BUN |
| Ney et al. 2016 [ | Eleven weeks | Three weeks each of GMP-AAs or AAs; 15 patients in each arm | Three weeks each of GMP-AAs or AAs; 15 patients in each arm | Blood Phe | Blood Tyr |
| Daly et al. 2017 [ | Twenty-six weeks | 12 patients—GMP-AAs | 9 patients—AAs | Blood Phe | Blood Tyr |
| Pinto et al. 2017 [ | Twenty months | 11 patients—GMP-AAs | 11 patients—AAs | Blood Phe | Blood Tyr |
| Ahring et al. 2018 [ | Four visits, analysis at five timepoints (0, 15, 30, 60, 120 and 240 min) | 6 patients tested the four DMs (DM1 = GMP; DM3 = GMP + AAs) | 6 patients tested the four DMs [DM2 = AAs (equivalent amino acid profile to DM1); DM4 = AAs (equivalent amino acid profile to DM3 but without Phe)] | Blood Phe | Blood Tyr |
AAs: synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids; BUN: blood urea nitrogen; DM: drink mixture; GMP: glycomacropeptide; GMP-AA: glycomacropeptide supplemented with amino acids; N/A: not available; Phe: phenylalanine; PKU: phenylketonuria; Tyr: tyrosine. * The results of acceptability are shown in Table 3.
Acceptability of GMP products versus AAs.
| Author, Year (Ref.) | Method | Number of Items Evaluated | Type of Items Evaluated | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lim et al. 2007 [ | Five-point hedonic scale 1 | Seven products (five GMP-AAs and two AAs) | GMP-AAs (strawberry pudding, strawberry fruit leather, chocolate beverage, snack crackers, orange sports beverage) and AAs (crackers, chocolate beverage) | Decreasing order of overall acceptability—strawberry pudding (4.2 ± 0.9), snack cracker (3.6 ± 1.4), strawberry fruit leather (3.4 ± 1.0), chocolate beverage (3.3 ± 1.0), orange sports beverage (3.3 ± 1.1), AAs in crackers (2.9 ± 1.3), AAs in a chocolate beverage (2.5 ± 1.4) |
| van Calcar et al. 2009 [ | No methodology described | Six GMP-AAs and subject’s usual AAs | GMP-AAs (orange-flavoured sports beverage, chocolate-flavoured or caramel-flavoured beverage, chocolate or strawberry pudding, cinnamon crunch bar) and subject’s usual AAs | After consuming the GMP-AAs diet for four days, 10 of 11 subjects claimed that the GMP-AAs products were superior in sensory qualities to their usual AAs. Moreover, at the end of the study, 6 of 7 adults expressed a strong preference to consume GMP-AAs products rather than their usual AAs |
| MacLeod et al. 2010 [ | Four questions, motivation-to-eat VAS questionnaires | Six GMP-AAs and subject’s usual AAs | GMP-AAs (orange-flavoured sports beverage, chocolate-flavoured or caramel-flavoured beverage, chocolate or strawberry pudding, cinnamon crunch bar) and subject’s usual AAs | The motivation-to-eat VAS profiles were not significantly different at any timepoint between the AAs (day 4) and GMP-AAs (day 8) |
| Zaki et al. 2016 [ | Questionnaire | N/A | N/A | Throughout the study, all patients preferred the diet supplemented with GMP over the classical AAs due to better taste and satiety |
| Ney et al., 2016 [ | Six-question survey and six-point scale 2 | Fifteen AAs and N/A the exact number of GMP-AAs | N/A | AAs vs GMP-AAs |
| Daly et al., 2017 [ | Acceptability questionnaires (taste, smell, texture, mouthfeel and overall acceptability) | N/A | In the GMP-AAs group, subjects took a berry flavoured GMP-AAs powder (35 g sachet = 20 g protein equivalent) which subjects prepared with water or low-protein milk | All of the subjects in the GMP-AAs group described the protein substitute as acceptable, with improved taste, mouth feel, texture, and smell compared to their conventional AAs |
| Pinto et al., 2017 [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Ahring et al., 2018 [ | Two questions—VAS 3 | Four DMs | DM1 = GMP; DM2 = AAs (equivalent amino acid profile as DM1); DM3 = GMP + AAs (0.16 g Phe/100 g amino acids present in GMP); DM4 = AAs (equivalent amino acid profile as DM3 but without Phe) | 1) DM1: 36 ± 18, DM2: 41 ± 16, DM3: 28 ± 27, DM4: 35 ± 30); 2) DM1: 34 ± 31, DM2: 44 ± 22, DM3: 36 ± 28, DM4: 26 ± 22); all comparisons (DM1 and DM2, DM3 and DM4, DM3 to DM1 and DM2, respectively) were statistically insignificant |
AAs: synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids; DM: drink mixture; GMP: glycomacropeptide; GMP-AAs: glycomacropeptide supplemented with amino acids; N/A: not available; VAS: visual analogue scale. Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation or mean ± SEs (in the case of Ney et al., 2016). 1 Five sensory categories—appearance, odour, taste, texture and overall acceptability (1 = dislike very much; 2 = dislike; 3 = neither like nor dislike; 4 = like; 5 = like very much). 2 Six questions: (1) How much do you like your AAs/GMP-AAs?; (2) How easy is it to prepare your AAs/GMP-AAs?; (3) How willing are you to take AAs/GMP-AAs three times a day?; (4) How easy is it to stay on your phenylketonuria diet when you are using AAs/GMP-AAs?; (5) How comfortable are you eating AAs/GMP-AAs in social situations?; (6) Overall, how convenient is it to take and consume AAs/GMP-AAs away from home? (1 = dislike extremely; 2 = dislike; 3 = somewhat dislike; 4 = somewhat like; 5 = like; 6 = like extremely). 3 Two questions: (1) How satisfied are you? and (2) How does the DM taste? This was presented to patients as a horizontal line, ranking from 0 = very hungry to 100 = very satisfied and from 0 = bad taste to 100 = good taste.
Quality of all included studies according to Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) system.
| Outcomes | Number of Studies | Study Design | Risk of Bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood Phe | 2 | Randomised trials | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious |
| 5 | Observational studies | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious | |
| Blood Tyr | 2 | Randomised trials | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious |
| 4 | Observational studies | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious | |
| BUN | 2 | Randomised trials | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious |
| 3 | Observational studies | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious | |
| Glucose | 2 | Randomised trials | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious |
| 4 | Observational studies | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious | |
| Acceptability | 2 | Randomised trials | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious |
| 5 | Observational studies | Not serious | Serious | Not serious | Very serious |
BUN: blood urea nitrogen; Phe: phenylalanine; Tyr: tyrosine. The GRADE ranks as follows: not serious, serious, and very serious.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary across randomised controlled trials. Low risk of bias: green “+”; Unclear risk of bias: yellow “?”; High risk of bias: red “−”.
Figure 3Risk of bias graph across randomised controlled trials. Low risk of bias: green; Unclear risk of bias: yellow; High risk of bias: red.
Risk of bias in non-randomised studies according to the Risk of Bias in Non-Randomised Studies of Interventions (ROBINS-I) tool.
| Author, year (Ref.) | Domain 1 | Domain 2 | Domain 3 | Domain 4 | Domain 5 | Domain 6 | Domain 7 | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lim et al. 2007 * [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| van Calcar et al. 2009 [ | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2—Moderate |
| MacLeod et al. 2010 [ | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2—Moderate |
| Zaki et al. 2016 [ | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 2—Moderate |
| Daly et al. 2017 [ | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2—Moderate |
| Pinto et al. 2017 [ | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2—Moderate |
N/A. not applicable; Domain 1: confounding; Domain 2: selection of participants; Domain 3: classification of intervention; Domain 4: deviation from interventions; Domain 5: missing outcome data; Domain 6: measurement of outcomes; Domain 7: selection of reported result; Overall. Risk of bias assessment: 0—No information; 1—Low; 2—Moderate; 3—Serious; 4—Critical. * Non-comparative study only acceptability of GMP products is evaluated, therefore this tool is not applicable in this case.
Figure 4Forest plot of studies with data on the effect of glycomacropeptide interventions on blood phenylalanine levels. The analysis included data from two studies with a total of 72 participants. AAs: synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids; CI: confidence interval; df: degrees of freedom; GMP-AAs: glycomacropeptide supplemented with amino acids; IV: intravitreal; SD: standard deviation.
Figure 5Forest plot of studies with data on glycomacropeptide interventions on blood tyrosine levels. The analysis included data from two studies with a total of 72 participants.AAs: synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids; CI: confidence interval; df: degrees of freedom; GMP-AAs: glycomacropeptide supplemented with amino acids; IV: intravitreal; SD: standard deviation.
Figure 6Forest plot of studies with data on the effect of glycomacropeptide interventions on blood urea nitrogen. The analysis included data from two studies with a total of 72 participants.AAs: synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids; CI: confidence interval; df: degrees of freedom; GMP-AAs: glycomacropeptide supplemented with amino acids; IV: intravitreal; SD: standard deviation.
Figure 7Forest plot of studies with data on the effect of glycomacropeptide interventions on glucose levels. The analysis included data from two studies with a total of 72 participants. AAs: synthetic protein derived from L-amino acids; CI: confidence interval; df: degrees of freedom; GMP-AAs: glycomacropeptide supplemented with amino acids; IV: intravitreal; SD: standard deviation.