| Literature DB >> 35779234 |
Bernd Hoppe1, Cristina Martin-Higueras2,3.
Abstract
The primary hyperoxalurias are three rare inborn errors of the glyoxylate metabolism in the liver, which lead to massively increased endogenous oxalate production, thus elevating urinary oxalate excretion and, based on that, recurrent urolithiasis and/or progressive nephrocalcinosis. Frequently, especially in type 1 primary hyperoxaluria, early end-stage renal failure occurs. Treatment possibilities are scare, namely, hyperhydration and alkaline citrate medication. In type 1 primary hyperoxaluria, vitamin B6, though, is helpful in patients with specific missense or mistargeting mutations. In those vitamin B6 responsive, urinary oxalate excretion and concomitantly urinary glycolate is significantly decreased, or even normalized. In patients non-responsive to vitamin B6, RNA interference medication is now available. Lumasiran® is already available on prescription and targets the messenger RNA of glycolate oxidase, thus blocking the conversion of glycolate into glyoxylate, hence decreasing oxalate, but increasing glycolate production. Nedosiran blocks liver-specific lactate dehydrogenase A and thus the final step of oxalate production. Similar to vitamin B6 treatment, where both RNA interference urinary oxalate excretion can be (near) normalized and plasma oxalate decreases, however, urinary and plasma glycolate increases with lumasiran treatment. Future treatment possibilities are on the horizon, for example, substrate reduction therapy with small molecules or gene editing, induced pluripotent stem cell-derived autologous hepatocyte-like cell transplantation, or gene therapy with newly developed vector technologies. This review provides an overview of current and especially new and future treatment options.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35779234 PMCID: PMC9329168 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-022-01735-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 11.431
Fig. 1Glyoxylate metabolic pathway in the liver (modified from Martin-Higueras et al. [7]). The enzymatic deficits responsible for the three known types of primary hyperoxaluria are shown (I, II, and III). Oxalate is then secreted out of the liver, to be excreted by the kidneys. High levels of oxalate in the kidneys and urine lead to formation of calcium oxalate (CaOx) in the renal tissue and tubular system, causing urolithiasis (upper image) and/or nephrocalcinosis (lower image), which can be detected by ultrasound imaging procedures. 1P5CDH Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase, AGT alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase, AspAT aspartate aminotransferase, DAO D-aminoacid oxidase, GO glycolate oxidase, GRHPR glyoxylate reductase/hydropyruvate reductase, HOGA 4-hydroxy-2- oxoglutarate aldolase 1, HYPDH hydroxyproline dehydrogenase, LDH L-lactate dehydrogenase
Synopsis of clinical features and characteristics of PH types 1–3
| PH type | Clinical presentation | ESKD risk | Infantile oxalosis | Systemic oxalosis | Clinical remission |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | UL, NC, UTI, hematuria, failure to thrive | >50–100% | 10–20% of cases | +++ In case of advanced CKD/ESKD | none |
| 2 | UL, UTI, hematuria NC↓ | ca. 25% | Not reported | + Reported | None |
| 3 | UL, UTI, hematuria NC↓↓ is reported | CKD <20%, ESKD reported | Not reported | (+) Uncommon | Stones also in adulthood |
CCR complete clinical remission, ESKD end-stage renal disease, NC nephrocalcinosis, NC↓ indicates less frequent plus less severe NC in PH2, NC↓↓ indicates that (severe) nephrocalcinosis is a rare finding in PH3, PH primary hyperoxaluria, PH1 PH type 1, PH2 PH type 2, PH3 PH type 3, UL urolithiasis, UTI urinary tract infection
Synopsis of biochemical features in PH types 1–3
| PH type | Degree of hyperoxaluria | Concomitant/intermittent hypercalciuria | Glycolate excretion | L-glycerate excretion | HOG/DHG/4OHGlu excretion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | +++ | −−− (rare) | +++ (high)a | −−−− (low) | −− (low) |
| 2 | ++ | −−− (rare) | −−− (low) | +++ (high)b | −−− (low) |
| 3 | ++ | rare | −−− (low) | −−− (low) | +++ (high)c |
4OHGlu 4-hydroxyglutamate, DHG 2,4-dihydroxyglutarate, HOG 4-hydroxy -2- oxoglutarate, PH primary hyperoxaluria, PH1 PH type 1, PH2 PH type 2, PH3 PH type 3
aNot all patients with PH1 have elevated glycolate, but all patients with elevated glycolate and oxalate are diagnosed as PH1
bNot all patients with PH2 have elevated glycerate, but all patients with elevated glycerate and oxalate are diagnosed as PH2
cIn patients with PH3, DHG and 4OHGlu appear always, but HOG does not appear in all of them
Fig. 2Schematic of treatment for patients with primary hyperoxaluria (PH). If diagnosis is suspected, all patients with PH must be given the standard treatment of care by means of hyperhydration and citrate medication. In addition, patients with PH type 1 (PH1) should receive vitamin B6 (Vit B6) until a genetic diagnosis is available. With a genetic diagnosis in hand, the therapeutical processes are depicted in the figure. AKF acute kidney failure, ESKD end-stage kidney failure, PH2 PH type 2, PH3 PH type 3, RNAi RNA interference, Tx transplantation. *Missense mutations that respond to VitB6: p.G170R, p.G41R, p.F152I
Fig. 3Strategies for molecular therapy in primary hyperoxaluria (updated from Martin-Higueras et al. [7]): gene therapy with single-stranded adeno-associated virus (ssAAV) carrying one copy of AGXT cDNA (here also applicable SV40 as a vehicle); cell therapy by hepatocyte transplantation, including the potential autologous transplantation of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hepatocytes; proteostasis regulation therapy targeting molecular chaperones (Hsp60 and Hsp90) such as dequalinium chloride, monesin, and emetine, or directly stabilizing the (AGT) enzyme with the cofactor pyridoxine (B6); enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) by delivery of polymer-conjugated AGT proteins into the peroxisomal compartment; and substrate reduction therapy (SRT) through inhibition of glycolate oxidase (GO) in the peroxisome and/or lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA) in the cytosol either by RNA interference or by small molecules, or by editing the corresponding gene. AGT alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase, responsible for PH1, AGT-Mi AGT in the minor haplotype, DAO D-amino acid oxidase, GRHPR glyoxylate reductase/hydroxypyruvate reductase, enzyme deficient in PH2, HOGA1 4-hydroxy-2-oxoglutarate aldolase 1, involved in PH3, LDH L-lactate dehydrogenase
Patients with primary hyperoxaluria reported with RNAi medications outside clinical trials
| Patient no. and sex | Age of Dx | Clinical situation before RNAi | Age of starting RNAi medication and dose | Serum creatinine (Scr)/eGFR | Oxalate and Glycolate | Duration and dose of RNAi | Outcome/ Side effects | Other relevant information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 [ | 7 years old (post KTx) c.33dupC Phe152Ile | KTx + HD + B6 + hyperhydration + citrate Oxalosis in eyes | 7 years old (day 34 post-KTx) Lumasiran | 38 ml/min/1.73m2 at 4 months after Tx | 65.9% decrease Uox after 5 months. No raw value provided. Glycolate not measured | >5 months Fourth dose injected 3 months after third dose + B6 + citrate + hyperhydration | Slight elevation of GGT and alkaline phosphatase. Developed non-anion gap metabolic acidosis (HCO3- 14 mmol/L and anion gap 8mmol/L) after HD discontinuation due to elevated glycolate | Sodium bicarbonate resolved the metabolic acidosis |
2 [ Male Twin A | 11 months old (p.Gly161Cys p.Gly170Arg) | Passed stones at 6 weeks old. Kidney stone (100% CaOx) at 9 months old, bilateral UL and bilateral double-J stent. UTI. Bilateral ureteroscopic stone extraction with laser lithotripsy and a complicated bilateral ureteral stent removal + B6 + citrate | 12 months old Lumasiran | Prior: Scr 0.47 mg/dl Follow up: Scr 0,18 mg/dl | Prior: Uox/cr 0,19 mg/mg (normal <0.103) After: n/a Glycolate not measured | 8 months 6 mg/kg monthly for 3 months, 3 mg/kg monthly thereafter | Improved psychologically, and emotionally expressive. Well tolerated | Preeclampsia at week 31. B6 and citrate discontinued when lumasiran started |
3 [ Male Twin B | 11 months old p.Gly161Cys p.Gly170Arg (assumed from dizygotic twin A) | At 10 months old, bilateral renal (non-obstructive) and bladder calculi + B6 + citrate | 12 months old Lumasiran | Prior: Scr 0.31 mg/dl Follow up: Scr 0,12 mg/dl | Prior: Uox/cr 0,125 mg/mg After: n/a Glycolate not measured | 8 months 6 mg/kg monthly for 3 months, 3 mg/kg monthly thereafter | Stopped crying episodes. No new stone formation. No metabolic acidosis. Well tolerated | Preeclampsia at week 31. B6 and citrate discontinued when lumasiran started |
4 [ Female | 9 years old Homozygous for duplication of entire exon 9 | Recurrent kidney stones treated with ESWL and PNL since 3 years old. At 9 years old, bilateral coralliform stones. + hyperhydration + citrate + low-salt diet + B6 only for 3 months (Uox did not decrease) 5 urological interventions/year during 5 years (doubleJ in and out, ureteroscopy, laser therapy, and ESWL) | 13 years old 3 mg/kg monthly, then quarterly, starting one month after last loading dose Lumasiran | Prior: Scr 0.75 mg/dl. eGFR 67-60 ml/min/1.73m2 After: eGFR 62 ml/min/1.73m2 at month 18 post 1st dose | Prior: Uox/cr 0.21–0.28 mol/mol (normal <0.06 mol/mol) Pox: 20 µmol/L, and 32 µmol/L 4 years later (normal <27) After: Uox/cr 0.08 mol/mol (after first dose) 70% mean reduction of ox/cr ratio Pox: 13 µmol/L (after first dose). 16 µmol/L at month 18 60% mean reduction Glycolate not measured | 18 months | No substantial changes in kidney US at month 18. No new stones. No increase of old stones. No requirement of urological interventions. Temporary and asymptomatic episodes of macroscopic hematuria after the first four injections | No CaOx deposited in other tissue was observed prior to lumasiran No information provided about continuation of hyperhydration and/or citrate |
5 [ Male | Antenatal Dx (his sister was the index case) c.33dupC c.321_344del | 9 days old 6 mg/kg/month Lumasiran At month 2: + hyperhydration + citrate At month 4: 3 mg/kg + stiripentol At month 5: 6 mg/kg + stiripentol At month 6: stiripentol withdrawal At month 8: 3 mg/kg/month | At birth: “normal” At month 10 of lumasiran: “normal” | At birth: Uox/cr 1263 µmol/mmol Pox 36 µmol/L and marked elevated glycolate (no value) After first injection: Uox/cr 2853–1500 to 1060–1000 µmol/mmol at month 0.5, 1, 2, and 3. Pox 12 µmol/L at 3 months After seventh injection: 226 µmol/mmol No glycolate measured after lumasiran started | 10 months | Grade III NC after 2 months At month 10, hyperechogenicity started to decrease Well tolerated | Hyperhydration and citrate given from month 2 after starting lumasiran | |
6 [ (no gender displayed) | 2.5 months old p.Ile244Thr p.Ile244Thr | At age 2.5 months, grade III NC + hyperhydration + B6 + Mg citrate | 3 months old 6 mg/kg/month Lumasiran | At Dx: Scr 243 µmol/L, eGFR 8 ml/min/1.73m2 After 9th: Scr 120 µmol/L, eGFR 20 ml/min/1.73m2 | At Dx: Uox/cr 806 µmol/mmol and Pox 194 µmol/L Elevated glycolate (no value given) After 9th: Uox/cr 310 µmol/mmol (60% reduction) | 10 months | Grade III NC persisted | B6 withdrawn after 3 months under lumasiran |
| 7 [ | 3.5 months (clinically) 5.5 months: p.Ile244Thr p.Ile244Thr | At age 3.5 months, grade III NC + hyperhydration + B6 + citrate | 4 months old 6 mg/kg/month first 3 months 3 mg/kg/month other 3 months Lumasiran | Prior: Scr 30 µmol/L (eGFR 77 ml/min/1.73m2) After: “remained stable” | Prior: Uox/cr1651–2167 µmol/mmol Pox 36 µmol/L After: Uox/cr 1640–662 µmol/mmol after first and second dose. Elevated plasma glycolate (no value given) | 6 months | After fifth injection, nephrocalcinosis improved from grade III to grade II | Lumasiran started prior to genetic diagnosis, as allowed in France |
8 [ Female | Not mentioned | At age 36 years: ESKD and systemic oxalosis. Conventional HD At age 39 years: HD daily | 39 years old (6 months after HD started) 3 mg/kg monthly loading dose and quarterly maintenance (started 1 month after last loading) Lumasiran | Post KTx: Scr 140 µmol/L Methylprednisolone and antithymocyte globulin treatment resulted in Scr of 200 µmol/L (day 25 post KTx). 10 weeks post KTx, Scr 169 µmol/L | Prior: Pox ~100 µmol/L (normal <33) After: Pox ~80 µmol/L after second dose, >100 µmol/L after third dose, and ~27 µmol/L after fifth dose (before KTx) After KTx (d25): Pox 24 µmol/L and Uox 1.15 mmol/day (normal < 0.45); 10 weeks after Pox 20.9 µmol/L Glycolate not measured | 6 months, and continued on the seventh week after KTx | KTx after fifth dose. Inmunosuppression: basiliximab, steroids, tacrolimus, and everolimus + 1HD session + hyperhydration + citrate + B6 + indapamide + low-oxalate diet No adverse events or drug interactions | Oxalate nephropathy and rejection day 25 post-KT due to release of systemic oxalate stores |
9 [ Female | 40 years old c.680+1G>A c.680+1G>A (after kidney biopsy positive for CaOx crystals) | NL at age 19 years and 33 years, requiring lithotripsy. At age 40 years: hypertension, acrocyanosis, ESKD, systemic oxalosis in skin, and subcutaneous vessels. HD + B6 | 41 years old (11 months after HD initiation) 1mg/kg/month for 3 months, then quarterly Lumasiran | Prior: Scr 103 µmol/L (19 months before) and at presentation: Scr 1644 µmol/L (eGFR 2 ml/min/1.73m2) | At presentation: Uox 319 µmol/day Pre-HD prior lumasiran: Pox 98.2 µmol/L Pre-HD post 3 months of lumasiran: 62.8 µmol/L Glycolate not measured | 3 months | No signs of renal recovery, increased of extra-renal involvement: bilateral swan-neck deformities, reduced cardiac systolic function, and pulmonary hypertension | Stones of calcium, magnesium, oxalate, and phosphate Awaiting kidney-liver transplantation after lumasiran withdrawal |
10 [ Male | 38 years old p.Arg122* p.Arg122* | Long-standing HD for ESKD Severe calcified kidneys, osteosclerosis, and focal calcification of the iliac-femoral axis. Cardiac oxalate deposits | 38 years old (dose not reported) Lumasiran | On non-HD days, Scr 6 mg/ml | Prior: Pox 130 µmol/L No follow-up reported Glycolate not measured | 1 month | ||
11 [ Female | 5 years old c.973delG c.973delG | Symptomatic NL since 3 years old needing multiple ureteroscopy and ESWL. At age 20 years: ESKD and HD started | 20 years old (5 months after starting HD) 1.5 mg/kg Nedosiran | Prior HD: Scr 6 mg/dL (eGFR 9 ml/min/1.73m2) | Prior HD: Pox >60 µmol/L On HD: max 83 µmol/L Pre-nedosiran: 55.5 µmol/L Post-fifth dose: 13.9 µmol/L | 6 months | Decreased weekly HD sessions over nedosiran treatment (from 6 per week to 3 per week) No new NL events Only temporary injection site discomfort as a side effect | Patient elected to be removed from liver transplant waiting list during nedosiran treatment Awaiting renal transplantation |
B6 vitamin B6, CaOx calcium oxalate, Dx diagnosis, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, ESKD end-stage kidney failure, ESWL extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy, GGT gamma glutamyl transferase, HD hemodialysis, KT kidney transplantation, n/a not assessed, NC nephrocalcinosis, NL nephrolithiasis, Pox plasma oxalate, UL urolithiasis, Uox urinary oxalate, Uox/cr oxalate/creatinine ratio, US ultrasound, UTI urinary tract infection, PNL percutaneous lithotripsy, RNAi RNA interference
| Primary hyperoxaluria is a rare metabolic disorder, with often a fatal outcome if not treated. |
| New medications based on RNA interference are available but need adequate adjustment into the current therapeutic approaches. |
| Future treatment options are on the horizon. |