| Literature DB >> 33977036 |
Pascale de Lonlay1, Roland Posset2, Ulrike Mütze2, Karine Mention3, Delphine Lamireau4, Manuel Schiff1, Aude Servais1, Jean Baptiste Arnoux1, Anaïs Brassier1, Myriam Dao1, Claire Douillard5, Chris Ottolenghi1, Clément Pontoizeau1, Federica Miotto6, Jeannie Le Mouhaër7.
Abstract
Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is a rare inborn metabolic disorder, managed with a strict protein-restricted diet. At any time or age patients may still experience metabolic decompensations, requiring administration of branched chain amino acid (BCAA)-free formula to reduce leucine levels. This retrospective observational study of 126 decompensation episodes from 54 MSUD patients treated at five centers in France and Germany from 2010 to 2016, describes episodes and outcomes for patients stratified into groups who received enteral/oral or intravenous (IV) BCAA-free formula, and by pediatric or adult age categories. IV administration of BCAA-free formula was required in cases of gastric intolerance (33%), refusal to undergo nasogastric tubing (31%), "emergency" (14%) or coma patients (8%), and as prophylaxis before surgery (6%). Overall, mean duration of hospitalization was 6.6 days with oral/enteral BCAA-free formula and 5.4 days with IV formula. Leucine levels at discharge decreased by a mean of 548.5 μmol/L (69.3%) in the oral/enteral group and 657.2 μmol/L (71.3%) in the IV group. In the pediatric subgroup, there were no marked differences between administration groups on any outcome. In the adult subgroup, mean time to episode resolution was 15.8 days in the oral/enteral group and 7.7 days in the IV group (P = .008); mean duration of hospitalization was 6 days in the oral/enteral group and 4.6 days in the IV group (P = NS). Overall, seven serious adverse events in two patients were reported, of which only nausea and vomiting were treatment related.Entities:
Keywords: BCAA‐free formula; maple syrup urine disease; metabolic decompensations; observational study
Year: 2021 PMID: 33977036 PMCID: PMC8100389 DOI: 10.1002/jmd2.12207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JIMD Rep ISSN: 2192-8304
Patient and episodes characteristics by site
| Site 1 (n = 16) | Site 2 (n = 72) | Site 3 (n = 13) | Site 4 (n = 12) | Site 5 (n = 13) | Total episodes (n = 126) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||||
| Male | 10 (62.5%) | 29 (40.3%) | 7 (53.8%) | 3 (25%) | 11 (84.6%) | 60 (47.6%) |
| Female | 6 (37.5%) | 43 (59.7%) | 6 (46.1%) | 9 (75.0%) | 2 (15.4%) | 66 (52.4%) |
| Mean (SD) age at episode onset (years) | 7.7 (6.1) | 11.4 (10) | 16.3 (5.3) | 4.2 (2.6) | 6.0 (5.9) | 10.2 (8.9) |
| Age at episode onset by age groups | ||||||
| <1 year | 2 (12.5%) | 14 (19.4%) | 0 | 1 (8.3%) | 3 (23.1%) | 20 (15.9%) |
| 1–6 years | 7 (43.8%) | 12 (16.7%) | 0 | 8 (66.7%) | 5 (38.5%) | 32 (25.4%) |
| 6‐12 years | 1 (6.3%) | 15 (20.8%) | 4 (30.8%) | 3 (25.0%) | 2 (15.4%) | 25 (19.8%) |
| 12‐18 years | 5 (31.3%) | 9 (12.5%) | 4 (30.8%) | 0 | 3 (23.1%) | 21 (16.7%) |
| ≥18 years | 1 (6.3%) | 22 (30.6%) | 5 (38.5%) | 0 | 0 | 28 (22.2%) |
| Precipitating conditions of acute decompensation episodes | ||||||
| Febrile illness/Infection | 7 (43.8%) | 27 (37.5%) | 5 (38.5%) | 8 (66.7%) | 4 (30.8%) | 51 (40.5%) |
| Hormonal changes/Menstruations | 0 | 1 (1.4%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.8%) |
| Surgery | 1 (6.3%) | 5 (6.9%) | 0 | 0 | 2 (15.4%) | 8 (6.3%) |
| Stress | 1 (6.3%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.8%) |
| Vaccination | 1 (6.3%) | 1 (1.4%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 (1.6%) |
| Diet issues | 3 (18.8%) | 17 (23.6%) | 6 (46.2%) | 0 | 2 (15.4%) | 28 (22.2%) |
| No obvious apparent cause | 4 (25.0%) | 22 (30.6%) | 2 (15.4%) | 3 (25%) | 2 (15.4%) | 33 (26.2%) |
| Other | 1 (6.3%) | 6 (8.3%) | 2 (15.4%) | 1 (8.3%) | 3 (23.1%) | 13 (10.3%) |
| Presence of clinical manifestations | 10 (62.5%) | 49 (68.1%) | 4 (30.8%) | 12 (100%) | 10 (76.9%) | 85 (67.5%) |
| Emergency treatments | ||||||
| BCAA‐free formula | 16 (100%) | 72 (100%) | 13 (100%) | 11 (91.7%) | 13 (100%) | 125 (99.2%) |
| Glucose/Dextrose | 15 (93.8%) | 62 (86.1%) | 8 (61.5%) | 3 (25%) | 13 (100%) | 101 (80.2%) |
| High caloric | 16 (100%) | 46 (63.9%) | 6 (46.2%) | 3 (25%) | 13 (100%) | 84 (66.7%) |
| Lipids | 1 (6.3%) | 61 (84.7%) | 5 (38.5%) | 2 (16.7%) | 13 (100%) | 82 (65.1%) |
| Administration of BCAA‐free formula during episode | ||||||
| Enteral (tube)—Total | 5 (31.3%) | 41 (56.9%) | 2 (15.4%) | 9 (81.8%) | 12 (92.3%) | 69 (55.2%) |
| IV—Total | 0 | 44 (61.1%) | 4 (30.8%) | 2 (18.2%) | 1 (7.7%) | 51 (40.8%) |
| Oral—Total | 12 (75%) | 38 (52.8%) | 8 (61.5%) | 2 (18.2%) | 0 (0.00%) | 60 (48.0%) |
| Gastrostomy—Total | 0 | 2 (2.8%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 (1.6%) |
| Duration of BCAA‐free formula (hours) | ||||||
| N | 16 (100%) | 32 (44.4%) | 9 (69.2%) | 10 (90.9%) | 13 (100%) | 80 (64%) |
| Mean (SD) | 121.5 (66.8) | 112.6 (107.2) | 109 (68.6) | 99.5 (46.8) | 160.6 (194.6) | 120.1 (110.4) |
| Median (range) | 108 (48, 279) | 81.0 (7, 600) | 96 (24, 240) | 97.6 (24168) | 96 (24, 624) | 96 (7, 624) |
| Hemodialysis/hemofiltration (N) | 1 (6.3%) | 11 (15.3%) | 0 | 2 (16.7%) | 2 (15.4%) | 16 (12.7%) |
Abbreviations: BCAA, branched chain amino acid; IV, intravenous.
Multiple choice questions.
Two cases of neonatal episode, two cases of physical efforts, one travel abroad, Burkitt lymphoma, one abdominal pains, and one anemia possibly responsible for decompensation.
Leucine levels by treatment route stratificationsa
| Oral/enteral group | IV group | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of episodes | 69 (54.8%) | 36 (28.6%) |
| Leucine level at admission (μmol/L) | ||
| N | 69 (100%) | 36 (100%) |
| Mean (SD) | 791.4 (267.7) | 921.1 (333.5) |
| Median (range) | 757 (388.8, 1721) | 908 (382, 1684) |
| Leucine category at admission | ||
| Mild (5.0 mg/dL (381 μmol/L) ≤[Leu] <10.0 mg/dL (762 μmol/L)) | 36 (52.2%) | 10 (27.8%) |
| Moderate (10.0 mg/dL (762 μmol/L) ≤[Leu] <15.0 mg/dL (1144 μmol/L)) | 28 (40.6%) | 17 (47.2%) |
| Severe (15.0 mg/dL (1144 μmol/L) ≤[Leu] <20.0 mg/dL (1525 μmol/L)) | 3 (4.3%) | 8 (22.2%) |
| Critical ([Leu] ≥20.0 mg/dL (1525 μmol/L)) | 2 (2.9%) | 1 (2.8%) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 1 (μmol/L) | 617.0 (252.3) | 755.4 (251.6) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 2 (μmol/L) | 446.7 (247.2) | 584.5 (293.7) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 3 (μmol/L) | 348.1 (229.5) | 386.2 (279.3) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 4 (μmol/L) | 335.9 (233.8) | 289.6 (222.1) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 5 (μmol/L) | 320.4 (230) | 358 (280.1) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 6 (μmol/L) | 307.8 (225.1) | 379.2 (310.9) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level day 7 (μmol/L) | 279.8 (197.9) | 293.7 (121.9) |
| Mean (SD) leucine level based on last leucine reported (μmol/L) | 242.9 (163.8) | 263.9 (145.6) |
Data for excluded episodes or for patients who received HD/HF not shown.
Day at discharge was different between patients.
FIGURE 1Evolution of leucine levels over the first 7 days by treatment route
Clinical outcomes according to group stratifications
| Outcome | Oral/enteral group (N = 69) | IV group (N = 36) |
|---|---|---|
| Time to episode resolution (days) | ||
| N | 67 (98.5%) | 35 (100%) |
| Mean (SD) | 9.2 (6.2) | 7.4 (4.6) |
| Median (range) | 7 (2, 35.0) | 6 (2, 19) |
| Normalization of leucine | ||
| Yes | 55 (79.7%) | 29 (80.6%) |
| No | 13 (18.8%) | 7 (19.4%) |
| Unknown | 1 (1.4%) | 0 |
| Time to normalization of leucine (hours) | ||
| N | 55 (100%) | 29 (100%) |
| Mean (SD) | 68.4 (52.9) | 95.6 (79.2) |
| Median (range) | 48.8 (6.1, 334.3) | 72 (23.9, 428.8) |
| Length of hospital stay (days) | ||
| Mean (SD) | 6.6 (4.2) | 5.4 (2.7) |
| Median (range) | 5 (2, 23) | 5 (2, 14) |
| Was ICU/RU stay required? | ||
| No | 63 (91.3%) | 32 (88.9%) |
| Yes | 6 (8.7%) | 4 (11.1%) |
| Length of ICU stay (days) | ||
| N | 6 (100%) | 4 (100%) |
| Mean (SD) | 3.2 (2.1) | 2.5 (1.3) |
| Median (range) | 2.5 (1, 7) | 2.5 (1, 4) |
Episodes treated with HD/HF (N = 16) are not shown.
Episodes without end date were not included in the time to episode resolution analysis. Ongoing episodes were censored.
Missing N: 1 (1.5%).
Episodes that did not reach normalization were censored. Only one episode was excluded from the time to normalization analysis as only two plasma leucine values were reported on the same day without associated time. Normalization is the first‐time leucine reaches values <381 μmol/L.
FIGURE 2A, Evolution of leucine levels stratified by treatment group over the first 7 days in the pediatric population. B, Evolution of leucine levels stratified by treatment group over the first 7 days in the adult population
FIGURE 3A, Kaplan‐Meier analysis of time to episode resolution for pediatric patients based on treatment received. B, Kaplan‐Meier analysis of time to episode resolution for adult patients based on treatment received