Jaggumantri Sravan, Dunbar Mary, Edgar Vanessa, Mignone Cristina, Newlove Theresa, Elango Rajavel, Collet Jean Paul, Sargent Michael, Stockler-Ipsiroglu Sylvia, van Karnebeek Clara D M
Division of Biochemical Diseases (TIDE-BC), Department of Pediatrics, BC Children's Hospital, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; Child and Family Research Institute, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Division of Pediatric Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, BC Children's Hospital, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Pediatr Neurol. 2015 Oct;53(4):360-363.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2015.05.006. Epub 2015 May 16.
Creatine transporter (SLC6A8) deficiency is an X-linked inborn error of metabolism characterized by cerebral creatine deficiency, behavioral problems, seizures, hypotonia, and intellectual developmental disability. A third of patients are amenable to treatment with high-dose oral creatine, glycine, and L-arginine supplementation.
Given the limited treatment response, we initiated an open-label observational study to evaluate the effect of adjunct S-adenosyl methionine to further enhance intracerebral creatine synthesis.
Significant and reproducible issues with sleep and behavior were noted in both male patients on a dose of 50/mg/kg. One of the two patients stopped S-adenosyl methionine and did not come for any follow-up. A safe and tolerable dose (17 mg/kg/day) was identified in the other patient. On magnetic resonance spectroscopy, this 8-year-old male did not show an increase in intracerebral creatine. However, significant improvement in speech/language skills, muscle mass were observed as well as in personal outcomes as defined by the family in activities related to communication and decision making.
Further research is needed to assess the potential of S-adenosyl methionine as an adjunctive therapy for creatine transporter deficiency patients and to define the optimal dose. Our study also illustrates the importance of pathophysiology-based treatment, individualized outcome assessment, and patient/family participation in rare diseases research.
肌酸转运体(SLC6A8)缺乏症是一种X连锁的先天性代谢缺陷,其特征为脑肌酸缺乏、行为问题、癫痫发作、肌张力减退和智力发育障碍。三分之一的患者可通过高剂量口服肌酸、甘氨酸和L-精氨酸补充剂进行治疗。
鉴于治疗反应有限,我们开展了一项开放标签观察性研究,以评估辅助使用S-腺苷甲硫氨酸进一步增强脑内肌酸合成的效果。
在接受50毫克/千克剂量治疗的男性患者中均发现了显著且可重复的睡眠和行为问题。两名患者中的一名停止使用S-腺苷甲硫氨酸,且未进行任何随访。在另一名患者中确定了一个安全且可耐受的剂量(17毫克/千克/天)。在磁共振波谱分析中,这名8岁男性的脑内肌酸并未增加。然而,观察到其言语/语言技能、肌肉量以及家庭所定义的与沟通和决策相关活动中的个人成果有显著改善。
需要进一步研究以评估S-腺苷甲硫氨酸作为肌酸转运体缺乏症患者辅助治疗的潜力,并确定最佳剂量。我们的研究还说明了基于病理生理学的治疗、个体化结果评估以及患者/家庭参与罕见病研究的重要性。