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Phosphoglucomutase-1 deficiency: Early presentation, metabolic management and detection in neonatal blood spots

Authors :
Nicol C. Voermans
Saskia B. Wortmann
Lihadh Al-Gazali
Eva Morava
Jozef Hertecant
David Kronn
Ralph Fingerhut
Anne Jonge Poerink
Monique van Scherpenzeel
Dirk Lefeber
Nurulamin Abu Bakar
Katja S. Brocke Holmefjord
Federica Conte
Maaike de Vries
Annette Feigenbaum
Ellen Crushell
Stephanie Grunewald
Sunnie Wong
Lars Mørkrid
Source :
Mol. Genet. Metab. 131, 135-146 (2020), Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 131, 1-2, pp. 135-146, Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 131, 135-146
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science, 2020.

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 229474.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Phosphoglucomutase 1 deficiency is a congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG) with multiorgan involvement affecting carbohydrate metabolism, N-glycosylation and energy production. The metabolic management consists of dietary D-galactose supplementation that ameliorates hypoglycemia, hepatic dysfunction, endocrine anomalies and growth delay. Previous studies suggest that D-galactose administration in juvenile patients leads to more significant and long-lasting effects, stressing the urge of neonatal diagnosis (0-6 months of age). Here, we detail the early clinical presentation of PGM1-CDG in eleven infantile patients, and applied the modified Beutler test for screening of PGM1-CDG in neonatal dried blood spots (DBSs). All eleven infants presented episodic hypoglycemia and elevated transaminases, along with cleft palate and growth delay (10/11), muscle involvement (8/11), neurologic involvement (5/11), cardiac defects (2/11). Standard dietary measures for suspected lactose intolerance in four patients prior to diagnosis led to worsening of hypoglycemia, hepatic failure and recurrent diarrhea, which resolved upon D-galactose supplementation. To investigate possible differences in early vs. late clinical presentation, we performed the first systematic literature review for PGM1-CDG, which highlighted respiratory and gastrointestinal symptoms as significantly more diagnosed in neonatal age. The modified Butler-test successfully identified PGM1-CDG in DBSs from seven patients, including for the first time Guthrie cards from newborn screening, confirming the possibility of future inclusion of PGM1-CDG in neonatal screening programs. In conclusion, severe infantile morbidity of PGM1-CDG due to delayed diagnosis could be prevented by raising awareness on its early presentation and by inclusion in newborn screening programs, enabling early treatments and galactose-based metabolic management.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10967192
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol. Genet. Metab. 131, 135-146 (2020), Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 131, 1-2, pp. 135-146, Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 131, 135-146
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e25c4dbc4b7770f0ca7fd5c101e4b08