Serra Gregorio, Antona Vincenzo, Insinga Vincenzo, Morgante Giusy, Vassallo Alessia, Placa Simona La, Piro Ettore, Salerno Sergio, Schierz Ingrid Anne Mandy, Gitto Eloisa, Giuffrè Mario, Corsello Giovanni
Department of Health Promotion, Mother and Child Care, Internal Medicine and Medical Specialties "Giuseppe D'Alessandro", University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy.
Department of Human Pathology in Adult and Developmental Age "Gaetano Barresi", University of Messina, Messina, Italy.
Ital J Pediatr. 2024 Apr 14;50(1):67. doi: 10.1186/s13052-024-01632-x.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase II (CPT II) deficiency is a rare inborn error of mitochondrial fatty acid metabolism with autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance. Its phenotype is highly variable (neonatal, infantile, and adult onset) on the base of mutations of the CPT II gene. In affected subjects, long-chain acylcarnitines cannot be subdivided into carnitine and acyl-CoA, leading to their toxic accumulation in different organs. Neonatal form is the most severe, and all the reported patients died within a few days to 6 months after birth. Hereby, we report on a male late-preterm newborn who presented refractory cardiac arrhythmias and acute multiorgan (hepatic, renal, muscular) injury, leading to cerebral hemorrhage, hydrocephalus, cardiovascular failure and early (day 5 of life) to death. Subsequently, extended metabolic screening and target next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis allowed the CPT II deficiency diagnosis.
The male proband was born at 36 weeks of gestation by spontaneous vaginal delivery. Parents were healthy and nonconsanguineous, although both coming from Nigeria. Family history was unremarkable. Apgar score was 9/9. At birth, anthropometric measures were as follows: weight 2850 g (47th centile, -0.07 standard deviations, SD), length 50 cm (81st centile, + 0.89 SD) and occipitofrontal circumference (OFC) 35 cm (87th centile, + 1.14 SD). On day 2 of life our newborn showed bradycardia (heart rate around 80 bpm) and hypotonia, and was then transferred to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). There, he subsequently manifested many episodes of ventricular tachycardia, which were treated with pharmacological (magnesium sulfate) and electrical cardioversion. Due to the critical conditions of the baby (hepatic, renal and cardiac dysfunctions) and to guarantee optimal management of the arrythmias, he was transferred to the Pediatric Cardiology Reference Center of our region (Sicily, Italy), where he died 2 days later. Thereafter, the carnitines profile evidenced by the extended metabolic screening resulted compatible with a fatty acid oxidation defect (increased levels of acylcarnitines C and C, and low of C); afterwards, the targeted next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis revealed the known c.680 C > T p. (Pro227Leu) homozygous missense mutation of the CPTII gene, for diagnosis of CPT II deficiency. Genetic investigations have been, then, extended to the baby's parents, who were identified as heterozygous carriers of the same variant. When we meet again the parents for genetic counseling, the mother was within the first trimester of her second pregnancy. Therefore, we offered to the couple and performed the prenatal target NGS analysis on chorionic villi sample, which did not detect any alterations, excluding thus the CPT II deficiency in their second child.
CPTII deficiency may be suspected in newborns showing cardiac arrhythmias, associated or not with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, polycystic kidneys, brain malformations, hepatomegaly. Its diagnosis should be even more suspected and investigated in cases of increased plasmatic levels of creatine phosphokinase and acylcarnitines in addition to kidney, heart and liver dysfunctions, as occurred in the present patient. Accurate family history, extended metabolic screening, and multidisciplinary approach are necessary for diagnosis and adequate management of affected subjects. Next generation sequencing (NGS) techniques allow the identification of the CPTII gene mutation, essential to confirm the diagnosis before or after birth, as well as to calculate the recurrence risk for family members. Our report broads the knowledge of the genetic and molecular bases of such rare disease, improving its clinical characterization, and provides useful indications for the treatment of patients.
肉碱棕榈酰转移酶II(CPT II)缺乏症是一种罕见的线粒体脂肪酸代谢先天性缺陷,呈常染色体隐性遗传模式。基于CPT II基因的突变,其表型具有高度变异性(新生儿期、婴儿期和成人期发病)。在受影响的个体中,长链酰基肉碱不能分解为肉碱和酰基辅酶A,导致它们在不同器官中有毒性蓄积。新生儿型最为严重,所有报道的患者在出生后几天至6个月内死亡。在此,我们报告一名晚期早产男婴,他出现难治性心律失常和急性多器官(肝脏、肾脏、肌肉)损伤,导致脑出血、脑积水、心血管衰竭,并在出生后第5天早期死亡。随后,通过扩展代谢筛查和靶向新一代测序(NGS)分析确诊为CPT II缺乏症。
该男性先证者通过自然阴道分娩于妊娠36周出生。父母健康且非近亲结婚,尽管他们都来自尼日利亚。家族史无异常。阿氏评分9/9。出生时,人体测量指标如下:体重2850 g(第47百分位,-0.07标准差,SD),身长50 cm(第81百分位,+0.89 SD),枕额周长(OFC)35 cm(第87百分位,+1.14 SD)。出生后第2天,我们的新生儿出现心动过缓(心率约80次/分钟)和肌张力减退,随后被转入新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)。在那里,他随后出现多次室性心动过速发作,采用药物(硫酸镁)和电复律治疗。由于婴儿病情危急(肝、肾和心脏功能障碍),为确保心律失常的最佳管理,他被转至我们地区(意大利西西里岛)的儿科心脏病学参考中心,2天后死亡。此后,扩展代谢筛查显示的肉碱谱与脂肪酸氧化缺陷相符(酰基肉碱C和C水平升高,C水平降低);随后,靶向新一代测序(NGS)分析揭示了CPTII基因已知的c.680 C>T p.(Pro227Leu)纯合错义突变,确诊为CPT II缺乏症。然后,对婴儿的父母进行了基因检测,确定他们为同一变异的杂合携带者。当我们再次与父母进行遗传咨询时,母亲处于第二次怀孕的孕早期。因此,我们为这对夫妇提供并对绒毛膜绒毛样本进行了产前靶向NGS分析,未检测到任何改变,从而排除了他们第二个孩子患CPT II缺乏症的可能性。
对于出现心律失常的新生儿,无论是否伴有肥厚型心肌病、多囊肾、脑畸形、肝肿大,都应怀疑CPTII缺乏症。除了肾脏、心脏和肝脏功能障碍外,若血浆肌酸磷酸激酶和酰基肉碱水平升高,如本病例患者,其诊断更应受到怀疑并进行调查。准确的家族史、扩展代谢筛查和多学科方法对于受影响个体的诊断和适当管理是必要的。新一代测序(NGS)技术可识别CPTII基因突变,这对于在出生前或出生后确诊以及计算家庭成员的复发风险至关重要。我们的报告拓宽了对这种罕见疾病的遗传和分子基础的认识,改善了其临床特征,并为患者治疗提供了有用的指导。