| Literature DB >> 33036647 |
Aileen Kenneson1, Rani H Singh2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: N-Acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS) deficiency is an extremely rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder affecting the urea cycle, leading to episodes of hyperammonemia which can cause significant morbidity and mortality. Since its recognition in 1981, NAGS deficiency has been treated with carbamylglutamate with or without other measures (nutritional, ammonia scavengers, dialytic, etc.). We conducted a systematic literature review of NAGS deficiency to summarize current knowledge around presentation and management.Entities:
Keywords: Carbaglu; Carbamylglutamate; Hyperammonemia; Inherited metabolic disorder; N-Acetylglutamate synthase; N-Acetylglutamate synthase deficiency; NAGS; Urea cycle
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33036647 PMCID: PMC7545900 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-020-01560-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1The urea cycle.
Adapted from https://www.genereviews.org/ © 1993–2020 University of Washington [1]. ARG1 arginase, ASL argininosuccinic acid lyase, ASS1 argininosuccinic acid synthetase, CPS1 carbamyl phosphate synthetase 1, NAG N-acetylglutamate, NAGS N-acetylglutamate synthase, ORNT1 ornithine translocase, OTC ornithine transcarbamylase
Presenting signs and symptoms of NAGS deficiency described in the literature
| Neonatal presentation—clinical symptomsa | Post-neonatal presentation—clinical symptomsa | Biochemical signs in blooda |
|---|---|---|
| n = 38 | n = 28 | |
| Poor feeding/anorexia/intolerance (n = 16) | Vomiting (n = 12) | Elevated ammonia (n = 43) |
| Vomiting (n = 13) | Confusion/disorientation (n = 7) | Elevated glutamine (n = 29) |
| Coma (n = 12) | Ataxia (n = 7) | Decreased citrulline (n = 20) |
| Lethargy (n = 12) | Lethargy (n = 7) | Elevated alanine (n = 9) |
| Hypotonia (n = 7) | Avoidance of high-protein | Decreased arginine (n = 7) |
| Hypertonia (n = 6) | Foods (n = 6) | Respiratory alkalosis (n = 6) |
| Seizures (n = 6) | Coma (n = 6) | Decreased isoleucine (n = 4) |
| Tachypnea (n = 6) | Decreased level of | Elevated lactate (n = 4) |
| Encephalopathy (n = 4) | Consciousness (n = 6) | Decreased leucine (n = 3) |
| Respiratory distress (n = 4) | Seizures (n = 5) | Decreased ornithine (n = 3) |
| Unresponsiveness (n = 4) | Hypotonia (n = 5) | Elevated arginine (n = 3) |
| Abnormal movements (n = 3) | Small head circumference (n = 5) | Elevated lysine (n = 3) |
| Hepatomegaly (n = 3) | Abnormal reflexes (n = 4) | Coagulation problems (n = 2) |
| Poor sucking (n = 3) | Weight at low percentile (n = 4) | Decreased BUN (n = 2) |
| Somnolence/drowsiness (n = 3) | Combativeness/aggression (n = 3) | Elevated AST (n = 2) |
| Convulsions (n = 2) | Hepatomegaly (n = 3) | Elevated phenylalanine (n = 2) |
| Hyperthermia (n = 2) | Nausea (n = 3) | Hypoglycemia (n = 2) |
| Irritability (n = 2) | Somnolence/drowsiness (n = 3) | |
| Tremor/trembling (n = 2) | Anorexia (n = 2) | |
| Bizarre behavior (n = 2) | ||
| Convulsions (n = 2) | ||
| Headaches (n = 2) | ||
| Involuntary movements (n = 2) | ||
| Restlessness (n = 2) | ||
| Poor growth (n = 2) |
aClinical signs or symptoms reported in two or more cases in the literature
Liver NAGS enzyme activity in NAGS deficiency cases and carriers
| References | Onset | NAGS activity without argininea | NAGS activity with arginineb | Confirmed with DNA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Neonatal | 0% | Not reported | |
| [ | Neonatal | 15% (not given in Uc) | Not stimulated | |
| [ | Neonatal | 10% (not given in U) | Not stimulated | |
| [ | Neonatal | 34% (not given in U) | Stimulated | |
| [ | Neonatal | 0% | 2% 0.44 nmol/min/g protein (Refs. [ | |
| [ | Neonatal | 10U = 29% | 20U = 14% | √ |
| [ | Neonatal | 141U = 100% | 74U = 51% | √ |
| [ | Neonatal | 78U = 100% | 104U = 72% | |
| [ | Neonatal | 98U = 100% | 64U = 44% | √ |
| [ | Neonatal | < 10% not calculable | Not stimulated | |
| [ | Neonatal | 6U = 18% | 14U = 10% | √ |
| [ | Neonatal | 14U = 41% | 9U = 6% | |
| [ | Neonatal | 0U = 0% | 72U = 50% | √ |
| [ | Neonatal | 2.1 nmol/min/g protein (Ref. not given) | 4% 2.5 nmol/min/g protein (control:62.8) | |
| [ | 5 weeks | 0% not detectable | Not reported | |
| [ | 5 months | Not reported | 55U = 38% | |
| [ | 13 months | Not reported | 47.9U = 33% | |
| [ | 3 years | 94U = 100% | 197U = 100% | √ |
| [ | 4 years | 9U = 26% | Stimulated (below ref.) | |
| [ | 4 years | 27% 110 nmol/min/g protein (control: 1160 ± 750) | Not reported | |
| [ | 12 years | 22U = 65% | 22U = 15% | √ |
| [ | 12 years | 30U = 88% | 46U = 32% | |
| [ | 20 years | 14.3U = 42% | 21.4U = 15% | √ |
| [ | 40 years | 5% (not given in U) | 4% (not given in U) | √ |
| [ | Late | 50% (not given in U) | 75% (not given in U) | √ |
| [ | N/A | 12U = 35% | 62U = 43% | √ |
| [ | N/A | 12U = 35% | 12U = 8% | √ |
| [ | N/A | 8U = 24% | 32U = 22% | √ |
aReference > 34 unless otherwise stated
bReference > 144 unless otherwise stated
cU = nmol/min/g protein
Literature review of nutrition management in conjunction with carbamylglutamate treatment
| Year | Refs. | Onset | Carbamyl-glutamate mg/kg/day | Protein g/kg/day | Citrulline mg/kg/day | Arginine mg/kg/day | Sodium benzoate mg/kg/day | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | [ | N | 180–320 | 1.5 | 430b | 700b | Deceased at 9 years | |
| 1995 | [ | N | 80–100 | Normal growth at 1 year | ||||
| 1996 | [ | 5 months | √ (4 × 200 mg/day) | 3.5 | Not stated | |||
| 1997 | [ | 20 years | 60 | 50 | Gross cerebral dysfunction; paraplegia | |||
| 1998 | [ | N | 100 | 2.5 | 70 | Normal at 20 months | ||
| 1998 | [ | 12 years | 100 | 1.2 | Normal at age 24 years | |||
| 1999 | [ | 4 years | 100 | 0.9–1.0 | Cognitive impairment | |||
| 2002 | [ | N | 150 | √ | Developmental delay | |||
| 2003 | [ | 12 years | 15 | Not stated | ||||
| 2003 | [ | N | 15–200 | Normal at 13 years | ||||
| 2007 | [ | N | 50 | 2.0–3.5a | Normal at 2.5 years | |||
| 2011 | [ | N | √ (200–800 mg/d) | Normal at 20 years | ||||
| 2013 | [ | 38 years | 150 | Short-term memory loss | ||||
| 2014 | [ | N | 30 | Normal at 3 years | ||||
| 2014 | [ | N | 100 | Normal at 9 months | ||||
| 2015 | [ | N | 75–100 | 2.0 | Poor growth, mild MR, ADHD at 9 years | |||
| 2016 | [ | N | 200 | Not stated | ||||
| 2016 | [ | N | 100 | 2.0–2.5 | Deceased at 4.5 months | |||
| 2017 | [ | N | 40 | Normal at 7 months | ||||
| 2017 | [ | 59 years | √ (2 × 600 mg/d) | 0.8 | Normal | |||
| 2018 | [ | 52 years | 24 | Discontinuation of symptoms | ||||
| 2018 | [ | 3 years | √ (5 × 200 mg/d) | 1.0 | Not stated | |||
| 2018 | [ | 6 years | 50 | 1.8 | Normal growth and development | |||
| 2018 | [ | 6 years | 50 | Not stated | ||||
| 2020 | [ | N | 50 | 3.5 | Normal growth and development at 6 years | |||
| 2020 | [ | N | 50 | 3.5 | Normal growth and development at 4 years | |||
| 2020 | [ | N | 50 | Normal growth and development at 16 months |
N neonatal onset
√, dose not given in mg/kg/day
aAtaxia developed when protein was increased to 3.5 g/kg/day
bFirst arginine, then changed to citrulline