| Literature DB >> 33977028 |
Maitou Pal1, Baiba Lace2, Yvan Labrie3, Nathalie Laflamme3, Nadie Rioux3, Samarth Thonta Setty3, Marc-Andre Dugas4, Louise Gosselin3, Arnaud Droit3, Nicolas Chrestian5, Serge Rivest3.
Abstract
Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy (PDE) is a relatively rare subgroup of epileptic disorders. They generally present in infancy as an early onset epileptic encephalopathy or seizures, refractory to standard treatments, with rapid and variable responses to vitamin B6 treatment. Whole exome sequencing of three unrelated families identified homozygous pathogenic mutation c.370_373del, p.Asp124fs in PLPBP gene in five persons. Haplotype analysis showed a single shared profile for the affected persons and their parents, leading to a hypothesis about founder effect of the mutation in Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region of French Canadians. All affected probands also shared one single mitochondrial haplotype T2b3 and two rare variations in the mitochondrial genome m.801A>G and m.5166A>G suggesting that a single individual female introduced PLPBP mutation c.370_373del, p.Asp124fs in Quebec. The mutation p.Asp124fs causes a severe disease phenotype with delayed myelination and cortical/subcortical brain atrophy. The most noteworthy radiological finding in this Quebec founder mutation is the presence of the temporal cysts that can be used as a marker of the disease. Also, both patients, who are alive, had a history of prenatal supplements taken by their mothers as antiemetic medication with high doses of pyridoxine. In the context of suspected PDE in patients with neonatal refractory seizures, treatment with pyridoxine and/or Pyridoxal-5-phophate has to be started immediately and continued until the results of genetic analysis received. Even with early appropriate treatment, neurological outcome of our patient is still poor.Entities:
Keywords: PLPBP; PROSC; vitamin B6‐dependent early‐onset epilepsy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33977028 PMCID: PMC8100403 DOI: 10.1002/jmd2.12196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JIMD Rep ISSN: 2192-8304
FIGURE 1Pyridoxine metabolism. IP, intestinal phosphatases; PK, pyridoxine kinase; PLP, Des PLP dependent enzymes; PLP, pyridoxal 5′‐phosphate. PLPBP binds PLP and might participate in storage of PLP
FIGURE 2Brain MRI features. First row: axial T2 sequence; second row: axial T1 sequence; third‐row: coronal T2 sequence. A, Patient A at 2 months almost normal with mild delayed myelination. Increased subarachnoid spaces. B, Patient B at day 3 delayed myelination with temporal cysts and broad gyration with increased subarachnoid spaces and cortico‐subcortical atrophy. C, Patient C at 10 months mild delayed myelination, increased subarachnoid spaces, and cortico/subcortical atrophy. D, patient D at 1‐month broad gyration, delayed myelination, temporal cysts increased subarachnoid spaces, and cerebral atrophy. E: patient E at day 3 broad gyration, delayed myelination, temporal cysts, increased subarachnoid spaces, and cortico‐subcortical atrophy
Clinical symptoms
| Observation | Patient A | Patient B | Patient C | Patient D | Patient E |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DOB | January 23, 2017 | October 1, 2017 | September 22, 2012 | September 7, 2016 | August 1, 2014 |
| Date of death | n/a | October 14, 2017 | February 7, 2014 | n/a | August 20, 2014 |
| Birth weight (g) | 3205 | 3110 | 3752 | 2790 | 3190 |
| Head circumference (cm) | 33 | 31,5 | 33 | 33,5 | 34 |
| Perinatal anomalies | Meconium in amniotic fluid |
Meconium in amniotic fluid Oligohydramnios | Emergency c‐section due to abnormal fetal heart tracing |
Emergency c‐section due to abnormal fetal heart tracing Oligohydramnios | Meconium in amniotic fluid |
| Neonatal metabolic lactic acidosis (mmol/L) | ↑4.9 | ↑5.0 | ↑6.0 | ↑12.3 | ↑8.5 |
| APGAR | 6‐9‐10 | 9‐10 | 8‐9 | 9‐10 | 9‐9 |
| Age seizure onset | Day 0 | Day 0 | Day 1 | Day 0 | Day 0 |
| EEG at onset | Abnormal | Abnormal | Abnormal | Abnormal | Abnormal |
| Type of seizure | Tonic‐clonic, upper extremities, Nystagmus + |
Tonic‐clonic, upper and lower extremities Recurrent hiccups | Arms flexion movements | Tonic movements, Tremulations, Abnormal mouth movements |
Abnormal eyes movements Extension clonic movements Spasms |
| Initial anticonvulsants |
Phenobarbital Levetiracetam |
Phenobarbital Levetiracetam Lorazepam |
Phenobarbital Midazolam Lamotrigine |
Phenobarbital Levetiracetam Lorazepam |
Phenobarbital Levetiracetam Lorazepam Phenytoine |
| Age—first dosage B6 | Day 1 of life | Day 1 of life | Day 8 of life | Day 3 of life | Day 1 of life |
| Dosage, admin first dose | P5P 50 mg TID | P5P 30 mg TID | P5P 25 mg TID |
Pyridoxine 85 mg DIE × 7 d Pyridoxine 42.5 mg BID |
P5P 50 mg initial dose P5P 25 mg BID |
| Withdrawal trial of B6? | Yes, at 2 mo. | No, suspended at day 4 of life | Yes, at 6 wk of life | Yes, at day 29 of life and 1.5 y | Yes, at 3 d |
|
| Increased refractory convulsions | n/a | Increased convulsions | Recurrence of convulsions | n/a |
| MRI (Figure |
N on day 2 AB at 6 mo. |
AB on day 1 AB on day 4 |
AB on day 4 AB at 2 mo. AB at 6 mo. |
AB on day 1 AB on day 8 |
AB on day 3 AB on day 11 |
| Latest anticonvulsant regimen |
Wean off Nitrazepam Phenobarbital | n/a |
Clonazepam Valproic acid Lacosamide Vigabatrine and Topiramate |
Wean off Levetiracetam Topiramate Clobazam | Phenobarbital |
| Latest B6 dose | P5P 100 mg q4h | n/a | P5P 25 mg TID | P5P 75 mg QID Pyridoxine 42.5 mg BID | P5P 25 mg BID |
| Evolution of epilepsy | Stabilization | Deceased | Deceased | Stabilization | Deceased |
| Last EEG (2 y old) |
Activity linked to complicated breath holding spells Absence of definite epileptic activity | n/a | n/a |
Paroxystic and intermittent slow wave activity Absence of clear epileptiform elements | n/a |
| CSF | |||||
| Neurotransmitter metabolites | N |
| N | N | No data |
| Alpha aminoadipic semialdehyde | N | N | n/a | n/a | No data |
| 4 hydroxybutyric | N | N | n/a | n/a | No data |
| GABA | n/a | n/a | N | N | No data |
| Specific biom. for pyridoxine resp. seizures | Absent | Absent | n/a | n/a | No data |
| Pyridoxal 5′‐phosphate |
N on day 2 N at 1 y | N on day 4 | n/a | n/a | No data |
| Pyruvic acid (60‐190) | n/a | ↓25 | N | ↓27 | N |
| Plasma | |||||
| Acylcarnitines | N | N | N | N | N |
| AA GLycine level | N | N | N | N | N |
| Acide pyruvique (<80 μmol/L) | ↑230 | ↑249 | ↑110 | ↑390 | ↑129 |
| Creatine kinase (50‐200 U/L) | ↑5629 | ↑2486 | ↑4405 | ↑6706 | ↑8238 |
| Urine | |||||
| AA | N | N | n/a | N | N |
| Development | |||||
| Speech | Absent at 2 y | n/a | Not acquired at death |
Repeats words at 3 y. No sentences | n/a |
| Sitting months | 12 | n/a | Not acquired at death | 12 | n/a |
| Walking months | 24 | n/a | Not acquired at death | 23 | n/a |
| Fine motor function | n/a | n/a | Not acquired at death | Delayed | n/a |
| Weight percentile | 50th | n/a | 50th | 50th | n/a |
| Height percentile |
25 mo.: 15th 31 mo.: 25th | n/a | n/a |
14 mo.: 15th 38 mo.: <0.1 | n/a |
| Microcephaly | No | Reduced CP at birth | Yes progressive | Yes—progressive <2nd percentile | No |
Abbreviations: ↑, increase; ↓, decrease; AA, amino acids; AB, abnormal; CP, head circumference; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; EEG, electroencephalogram; GABA, gamma aminobutyric acid; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; N, normal; n/a, not applicable.