| Literature DB >> 33137944 |
Alex Pinto1, Catherine Ashmore1, Spyros Batzios2, Anne Daly1, Charlotte Dawson3, Marjorie Dixon2, Sharon Evans1, Diane Green4, Joanna Gribben5, Inderdip Hunjan6, Elisabeth Jameson7, Camille Newby8, Germaine Pierre8, Sanjay Rajwal9, Louise Robertson3, Si Santra1, Mark Sharrard10, Roshni Vara5, Lucy White10, Gisela Wilcox4,11, Ozlem Yilmaz1,12, Anita MacDonald1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the optimal dietary treatment for citrin deficiency. Our aim is to describe the management of UK citrin deficiency patients.Entities:
Keywords: FTTDCD; NICCD; citrin deficiency; clinical status; dietary management; outcomes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33137944 PMCID: PMC7693899 DOI: 10.3390/nu12113313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Definitions to characterise weight-for-age, height-for-age and BMI-for-age in patients with citrin deficiency.
| Weight-for-Age | Height-for-Age | BMI-for-Age z-Score(5–19 Years) | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Marginally underweight: <−1 | Marginally stunted: <−1 | Overweight: >+1 |
Abbreviations: BMI: Body mass index; * in patients >19 years of age.
Demographics, genetic results and symptoms on presentation for NICCD patients.
| Subject | Ethnicity | Consanguinity | Gender | Mutations | Co-existing Conditions | Full Term | Breast/Bottle Feeding on Presentation | Presentation Age | Diagnostic Age | Current Age | Biochemistry at Presentation/Diagnosis | Symptoms Post-Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A | Coeliac disease | NA | Regular infant formula | 1 month | 2 months | 11 years | Neonatal cholestasis, abnormal lactate. | Jaundice, abdominal pain due to constipation. Headache, lethargic morning leg pain. |
| 7 | White | Yes | Male | 1465T>C (C489R) | - | Yes | Breastfeeding | 2 months | 1 year | 14 years | Neonatal cholestasis. High citrulline, threonine and methionine. | Severe abdominal pain. |
| 8 | White | Yes | Male | c.1173T>G (P.Tyr391X) | Asthma | Yes | Regular infant formula | 1 month | 6 months | 6 years | Neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis and conjugated hyperbilirubinemias. | Jaundice, pale stools. |
| 9 | Asian | No | Female | c.852_855delTATG p.(Met285Profs*2) | - | Yes | Soya infant formula | 4 months | 5 months | 5 years | Cholestasis, high citrulline, galactosuria. | Hepatitis, jaundice, hypoglycaemia. |
| 11 | Asian | Yes | Male | - | - | Yes | Casein hydrolysate with medium chain triglyceride (MCT) infant formula | 1 month | 1 month | 1 years | Increased phenylalanine and tyrosine on newborn screening. | Asymptomatic. |
| 12 | Asian | No | Male | c.1763 G>A P. (Arg 588GIn) | - | Yes | Casein hydrolysate with MCT infant formula | 2 weeks | 8 months | 1 years | NA | Prolonged jaundice. |
| 16 | Asian | Yes | Male | c.1763 G>A | - | Yes | Casein hydrolysate with MCT infant formula | 1 month | 8 months | 6 years | Deranged liver function tests, clotting associated with positive reducing substances in urine and raised plasma citrulline. | Asymptomatic. |
| 18 | Asian | No | Male | c.1763G>A | Hypoplastic left heart syndrome | NA | NA | 1 month | 8 years | 20 years | Cholestasis. | Acute liver failure, hypoglycaemia (resolved with age). Abdominal pain, sweating on morning waking. |
| 22 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A | - | NA | Casein hydrolysate with MCT infant formula | 1 week | 7 months | 10 years | Raised phenylalanine and tyrosine, neonatal jaundice. | Recurrent abdominal pain and headaches. |
| 24 | Asian | No | Male | c.852_855delTATG p.(Met285Profs*2) | - | NA | Breastfeeding | 1 day | 2 months | 4 years | Neonatal cholestasis. | Asymptomatic |
| 25 | Asian | No | Male | c.848 G>T p. (Gly283 Val) | - | Yes | Breastfeeding | 2 months | 5 months | 3 years | Increased citrulline. | Conjugated jaundice. |
| 28 | Asian | No | Male | c.1763G>A | - | Yes | Casein hydrolysate with MCT infant formula | 1 month | 1 month | 8 years | Neonatal cholestasis, elevated phenylalanine and tyrosine on newborn screening. | Conjugated jaundice, hypoglycaemia. |
Abbreviations: NA—Not available; MCT—medium chain triglyceride.
Demographics, genetic results and symptoms on presentation for FTTDCD patients.
| Subject | Ethnicity | Consanguinity | Gender | Mutations | Co-existing Disorders | Presentation Age | Diagnostic Age | Current Age | Biochemistry at Presentation/Diagnosis | Symptoms Post-Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A | Coeliac disease | 1 year | 6 years | 8 years | NA | Abdominal pain and hypoketotic hypoglycaemia (sweating when eating sugar). |
| 6 | Asian | Yes | Male | 1610-1612 delTA Gins AT | GSD type IX | 2 years | 2 years | 8 years | NA | Night sweats. |
| 10 | Asian | No | Male | c.550C>T p. | - | 11 years | 12 years | 15 years | Neonatal hepatitis, carnitine deficiency. | Conjugated jaundice, hypoglycaemia, febrile seizure. |
| 13 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1766 C>T (p.Ser589 Phe) | - | 1 year | 8 years | 15 years | NA | Prolonged jaundice, abdominal pain. |
| 14 | Asian | No | Female | c. 1763G> A | - | 3 years | 3 years | 14 years | NA | Abdominal pain. |
| 20 | Asian | No | Female | c.1781G>A | Hypothyroidism | 7 years | 8 years | 11 years | Decompensated cirrhosis and thyroid antibodies, elevated plasma citrulline. | Asymptomatic. |
| 21 | Asian | No | Male | R588Q | - | 12 years | 12 years | 12 years | Neonatal hepatitis syndrome, raised citrulline, mildly elevated ammonia. | Asymptomatic. |
| 32 | Asian | No | Female | c.1763G> A | - | 1 year | 14 years | 22 years | Cirrhosis and steatosis. | Floppiness and rickets. Abdominal pain when fasting for Ramadan (unknown cause). Failure to thrive. |
Abbreviations: NA—Not available; GSD—glycogen storage disease.
Demographics, genetic results and symptoms on presentation for patients diagnosed by family screening.
| Subject | Ethnicity | Consanguinity | Gender | Mutations | Co-existing Disorders | Diagnosis Age | Current Age | Biochemistry at Presentation/Diagnosis | Symptoms Post-Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Asian | Yes | Male | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | Coeliac disease | 6 years | 6 years | NA | Asymptomatic. |
| 2 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 8 years | 10 years | NA | Abdominal pain. |
| 5 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 5 years | 6 years | NA | Asymptomatic |
| 15 | Asian | No | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 8 years | 19 years | NA | Long history of severe abdominal pain. |
| 17 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 4 years | 4 years | Elevated citrulline and threonine. | Hypoglycaemia, abdominal pain with reduced appetite. |
| 19 | Asian | No | Male | c.1781G>A(p.Gly594Asp) | Hypothyroidism | 1 year | 4 years | Cholestasis, raised ammonia and lactate, galactosuria, high citrulline. | Asymptomatic. |
| 23 | Asian | Yes | Male | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 2 years | 2 years | Raised phenylalanine and tyrosine. | Asymptomatic. |
| 26 | Asian | No | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 35 years | 44 years | NA | Abdominal pain, feels nauseous with certain foods, abdominal cramps and frequent bowel movements. |
| 27 | Asian | Yes | Male | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 5 years | 13 years | NA | Asymptomatic. |
| 29 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 9 years | 19 years | NA | Abdominal pain. |
| 30 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 15 years | 22 years | NA | Abdominal pain. |
| 31 | Asian | Yes | Female | c.1763G>A(p.Arg588Gln) | - | 12 years | 20 years | Unconjugated jaundice. | Abdominal pain. |
Abbreviations: NA—Not available.
Dietary treatment, food preferences/aversions and growth parameters of all study participants.
| Subject | Presentation | Growth at | Last Growth | Food Aversions/Preferences | Current Prescribed Dietary Management | Median Intake from Dietary Assessments | Oral Emergency Feed for Illness Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Family screening | −1.11 | −1.52 | Likes custard. | Normal diet. | CHO: 42% Protein: 18% | Not prescribed. |
| 2 | Family screening | −2.29 | −2.35 | Avoids: sweets, puddings, fruit juice, cakes, biscuits. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | CHO: 28% Protein: 20% | Low sugar soya milk. |
| 3 | FTTDCD | −2.96 | −2.62 | Avoids: sweets, puddings, fruit juice, cakes and biscuits. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet + MCT oil. One oral feed in the middle of the night. | CHO: 30% Protein: 19% | Low sugar soya milk + MCT emulsion + soya protein powder. |
| 4 | NICCD | −0.98 | −2.31 | Initial self- restriction of sweets | Normal diet | CHO: 44% Protein: 18% | Not prescribed. |
| 5 | Family screening | 1.85 | −1.01 | Dislikes sweets. | Normal diet | NA | Not prescribed. |
| 6 | FTTDCD | −0.03 | 1.36 | Dislikes sweets. Likes meat. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet (MCT). | NA | Liquid chocolate yoghurt. |
| 7 | NICCD | −2.91 | 0.84 | Dislikes CHO foods, e.g., bread, rice, potatoes, sweets. | Low sugar, high protein high fat diet (LCT/MCT). CHO limited to 30g/day. | CHO: 18% Protein: 27% | Soya protein powder + LCT/MCT emulsions + water. |
| 8 | NICCD | −1.08 | 1.94 | None described. | Normal diet. | CHO: 47% Protein: 19% | Not prescribed. |
| 9 | NICCD | −0.57 | −0.60 | Avoids sugar and likes cheese, fish, potatoes. | Normal diet. | CHO: 42% Protein: 23% | Soya milk. |
| 10 | FTTDCD | −1.05 | −0.58 | Avoids sugar. | Normal diet. | CHO: 45% Protein: 19% | Not prescribed. |
| 11 | NICCD | −0.43 | −2.01 | Eats sugary foods. Dislikes cheese. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. Casein hydrolysed formula with MCT. | CHO: 40% Protein: 11% | Hydrolysed formula (55% MCT fat). |
| 12 | NICCD | −2.54 | −4.51 | Eats sweet puddings. | Casein hydrolysed formula with MCT. | CHO: 43% Protein: 12% | Hydrolysed formula (55% MCT fat). |
| 13 | FTTDCD | −0.19 | −0.44 | Does not eat cake or biscuits; rarely eats rice, pasta and bread. Prefers high protein foods (yoghurt, milk, meat, eggs). | Low sugar, high protein/ high fat diet. | CHO: 47% Protein: 19% | Not prescribed. |
| 14 | FTTDCD | 0.69 | 0.91 | Dislikes sweets. Avoids CHO and prefers high protein foods (meat/cheese/milk). | Normal diet. | CHO: 28% Protein: 26% | Not prescribed. |
| 15 | Family screening | −0.16 | −0.08 | Dislikes sweets. Avoids vegetables and fruits. Craves high protein foods, particularly yoghurt. Likes cream. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | CHO: 32% Protein: 20% | Full fat milk. |
| 16 | NICCD | −1.04 | 0.02 | Dislikes sweets. Avoids high CHO containing foods. | Normal diet. | CHO: 43% Protein: 17% | Full fat milk. |
| 17 | Family screening | −2.71 | −1.70 | Avoids sugary foods. Likes yoghurt. | Lactose free diet (soya milk). | CHO: 41% Protein: 15% | Soya milk. |
| 18 | NICCD | −0.26 | −0.22 | Self-selects a high protein and high fat diet. Dislikes sweets and fizzy drinks. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | CHO: 42% Protein: 19% | Full fat milk, nuts. |
| 19 | Family screening | −0.89 | −0.40 | Likes CHO containing foods and sweets. | Normal diet. | CHO: 44% Protein: 16% | Not prescribed. |
| 20 | FTTDCD | −1.25 | −0.53 | Dislikes CHO containing foods and fruit. Likes meat. | Normal diet. | CHO: 42% Protein: 15% | Not prescribed. |
| 21 | FTTDCD | −1.41 | −1.74 | Dislikes fruit and vegetables. Prefers chicken. | Normal diet. | CHO: 46% Protein: 17% | Not prescribed. |
| 22 | NICCD | −2.69 | −0.46 | Dislikes vegetables. Prefers cheese. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | CHO: 40% Protein: 17% | Not prescribed. |
| 23 | Family screening | −3.47 | −1.04 | Likes high protein foods. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | CHO: 43% Protein: 14% | Not prescribed. |
| 24 | NICCD | −2.97 | −1.29 | Dislikes rice, potatoes and pasta but likes chicken and fish. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | NA | Full fat milk. |
| 25 | NICCD | 0.22 | −0.43 | Likes meat. | Low sugar, high protein, high fat diet. | NA | Full fat milk. |
| 26 | Family screening | −2.29 | −2.12 | Avoids many CHO containing food, fruit and vegetables. Prefers high protein foods. | Normal diet. | CHO: 41% Protein: 22% | Full fat milk. |
| 27 | Family screening | −0.64 | −0.15 | No food aversions. Likes dairy products. | Normal diet. | CHO: 44% Protein: 20% | Full fat milk. |
| 28 | NICCD | −0.82 | −0.39 | No food aversions. Likes chicken. | Normal diet. | NA | Full fat milk. |
| 29 | Family screening | −0.99 | −1.38 | Likes chicken and cheese. Does not like dairy products. | Normal diet. | CHO: 49% Protein: 13% | Full fat milk. |
| 30 | Family screening | −1.43 | −0.91 | No preferences. | Normal diet. | CHO: 48% Protein: 20% | Full fat milk. |
| 31 | Family screening | −0.89 | −0.89 | Dislikes sweet foods. Poor tolerance to dairy foods. | Normal diet. | CHO: 31% Protein: 23% | Full fat milk. |
| 32 | FTTDCD | −0.57 | −0.96 | Dislikes sugary foods. Prefers savoury foods. | Normal diet. | CHO: 37% Protein: 23% | Soya milk, nuts. |
Abbreviations: MCT—medium chain triglyceride; LCT—long chain triglyceride; CHO—Carbohydrates; NICCD—neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis; FTTDCD—failure to thrive and dyslipidaemia caused by citrin deficiency; NA—Not available.
Median percentage of energy contribution from protein, fat and CHO calculated from dietary assessments.
| Carbohydrates | Protein | Fat | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 42% [18–49] | 19% [11–27] | 40% [32–55] |
|
| 42% [18–47] | 18% [11–27] | 41% [33–55] |
|
| 42% [28–47] | 19% [15–26] | 38% [35–51] |
|
| 42% [28–49] | 20% [13–23] | 40% [32–53] |
Abbreviations: NICCD—neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis; FTTDCD—failure to thrive and dyslipidaemia caused by citrin deficiency.
Median percentage of energy contribution from carbohydrate, protein and fat of patients on prescribed compared to no ‘formal’ diet therapy.
| Carbohydrate | Protein | Fat | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 43% [28–49] | 19% [13–26] | 38% [32–51] |
|
| 40% [18–47] | 19% [11–27] | 45% [38–55] |
Figure 1Presentation/diagnosis and final weight-for-age, height-for-age and BMI-for-age z-scores for each individual patient. Abbreviations: BMI: Body mass index; NICCD—neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis; FTTDCD—failure to thrive and dyslipidaemia caused by citrin deficiency.
Figure 2Median % of levels > and < reference range for plasma amino acids levels pre- and post-diagnosis. Abbreviations: NICCD—neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis; FTTDCD—failure to thrive and dyslipidemia caused by citrin deficiency; N—number of patients with each biochemical measure. A minimum of three patients results were included for amino acids. Normal reference ranges were specific for each laboratory and patient’s age.
Figure 3Median % of levels > and < reference range for liver biochemical markers and haematology parameters pre- and post-diagnosis in NICCD patients. Abbreviations: NICCD—neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis; ALT—Alanine aminotransferase; ALP—alkaline phosphatase; GGT—gamma-glutamyl transferase; RBC—red blood cell; HB—haemoglobin; PCV—packed cell volume; MCV—mean corpuscular volume; MPV—mean platelet volume; APTT—activated partial thromboplastin time; HCT—haematocrit; N—number of patients with biochemical measurement. A minimum of three patients results were included for each biochemical marker. Normal reference ranges were specific for each laboratory and patient age.