| Literature DB >> 35683414 |
Magdalena Nowak1, Piotr Chuchra1, Justyna Paprocka2.
Abstract
Nonketotic hyperglycinemia (NKH) is a rare inborn error of glycine metabolism that is characterized by the accumulation of glycine in all tissues, especially in the central nervous system (CNS). Based on clinical outcomes, NKH can be divided into two forms, i.e., severe and attenuated NKH. A poor prognosis, including no developmental progress and intractable epilepsy, is typical of severe NKH, whereas patients with the attenuated form present with varied symptoms and neurodevelopmental outcomes. So far, no causal treatment of NKH is known. Currently, the therapy is based on sodium benzoate and NMDA (The N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor) receptor site antagonists (dextromethorphan, ketamine). Different clinical outcomes of the therapy raise doubts about the effectiveness of the treatment. The purpose of this review is to summarize the therapeutic potential, challenges and effectiveness of different NKH therapies.Entities:
Keywords: NMDA antagonists; inborn error of metabolism; ketogenic diet; nonketotic hyperglycinemia; sodium benzoate; treatment; vagal nerve stimulation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35683414 PMCID: PMC9181064 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11113027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Effectiveness of different therapies in NKH.
| Therapy | Clinical Outcome | Patients Group | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium benzoate | Reduction in plasma glycine level to ≤300 μmol/L, | 22/26 with severe neonatal NKH, | Hennermann et al. [ |
| Dextromethorphan | Increase in alertness, | 8/13 with severe neonatal NKH, | Hennermann et al. [ |
| Sodium benzoate and dextromethorphan | Improvement in apnea and initially better seizure control. | Patient with neonatal NKH. | Shin et al. [ |
| Amelioration of encephalopathic symptoms, | Patient with neonatal NKH. | Ichikawa et al. [ | |
| Reduction in seizure frequency and an improvement of alertness, developmental progress (only patients with attenuated NKH). | 9 patients with severe NKH and 1 patient with attenuated NKH. | Bayrak et al. [ | |
| Improvement in neurodevelopmental outcome and seizure control. | 4 patients with attenuated NKH. | Bjoraker et al. [ | |
| Reduction in myoclonic seizures. | Patient with attenuated NKH. | Brunel-Guitton et al. [ | |
| Sodium benzoate and ketamine | Benign neonatal course with no hypotonia and apnea. | Patient with severe NKH. | Korman et al. [ |
| Improvement in the frequency of myoclonic jerks and hypotonia. | 1 of 2 patients with severe NKH. | Poothrikovil et al. [ | |
| Improvement in hypotonia, apnea and respiration abnormalities, | 2 patients with neonatal NKH. | Boneh et al. [ | |
| Perampanel | Reduction of 50% of epileptic spasms. | Patient with severe NKH. | Daida et al. [ |
| Ketogenic diet | Reduction of over 50% of seizures. | 3 patients with severe NKH with early myoclonic encephalopathy. | Cusmai et al. [ |
| Reduction in seizure frequency and antiepileptic drugs, spasticity reduction. | Patient with severe NKH. | Kava et al. [ | |
| Lowering glycine levels, improvement of tonic spasms and tonic-clonic seizure control and complete resolution of tonic-clonic seizures. | 2 patients with severe NKH. | Shbarou et al. [ | |
| Resolution of super-refractory status epilepticus (SRSE). | Patient with severe NKH. | Appavu et al. [ | |
| Vagal nerve stimulation | Reduction of >75% of myoclonic and tonic seizure frequency, reduction in tonic seizures (of 90%), withdrawal or reduction of antiepileptic drugs from 6 to 3. | 2 patients with severe NKH. | Tsao et al. [ |
| Reduction in seizure frequency of more than 90%, dose reduction of AEDs. | Patient with neonatal NKH. | Grioni et al. [ |