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result(s) for
"Urea Cycle Disorders, Inborn - diagnosis"
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Suggested guidelines for the diagnosis and management of urea cycle disorders
by
Häberle, Johannes
,
Martinelli, Diego
,
Lindner, Martin
in
Ammonia
,
Arginase 1
,
Argininosuccinate lyase
2012
Urea cycle disorders (UCDs) are inborn errors of ammonia detoxification/arginine synthesis due to defects affecting the catalysts of the Krebs-Henseleit cycle (five core enzymes, one activating enzyme and one mitochondrial ornithine/citrulline antiporter) with an estimated incidence of 1:8.000. Patients present with hyperammonemia either shortly after birth (~50%) or, later at any age, leading to death or to severe neurological handicap in many survivors. Despite the existence of effective therapy with alternative pathway therapy and liver transplantation, outcomes remain poor. This may be related to underrecognition and delayed diagnosis due to the nonspecific clinical presentation and insufficient awareness of health care professionals because of disease rarity. These guidelines aim at providing a trans-European consensus to: guide practitioners, set standards of care and help awareness campaigns. To achieve these goals, the guidelines were developed using a Delphi methodology, by having professionals on UCDs across seven European countries to gather all the existing evidence, score it according to the SIGN evidence level system and draw a series of statements supported by an associated level of evidence. The guidelines were revised by external specialist consultants, unrelated authorities in the field of UCDs and practicing pediatricians in training. Although the evidence degree did hardly ever exceed level C (evidence from non-analytical studies like case reports and series), it was sufficient to guide practice on both acute and chronic presentations, address diagnosis, management, monitoring, outcomes, and psychosocial and ethical issues. Also, it identified knowledge voids that must be filled by future research. We believe these guidelines will help to: harmonise practice, set common standards and spread good practices with a positive impact on the outcomes of UCD patients.
Journal Article
The phenotypic spectrum of organic acidurias and urea cycle disorders. Part 1: the initial presentation
2015
Background
The clinical presentation of patients with organic acidurias (OAD) and urea cycle disorders (UCD) is variable; symptoms are often non-specific.
Aims/methods
To improve the knowledge about OAD and UCD the E-IMD consortium established a web-based patient registry.
Results
We registered 795 patients with OAD (n = 452) and UCD (n = 343), with ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency (n = 196), glutaric aciduria type 1 (GA1; n = 150) and methylmalonic aciduria (MMA; n = 149) being the most frequent diseases. Overall, 548 patients (69 %) were symptomatic. The majority of them (n = 463) presented with acute metabolic crisis during (n = 220) or after the newborn period (n = 243) frequently demonstrating impaired consciousness, vomiting and/or muscular hypotonia. Neonatal onset of symptoms was most frequent in argininosuccinic synthetase and lyase deficiency and carbamylphosphate 1 synthetase deficiency, unexpectedly low in male OTC deficiency, and least frequently in GA1 and female OTC deficiency. For patients with MMA, propionic aciduria (PA) and OTC deficiency (male and female), hyperammonemia was more severe in metabolic crises during than after the newborn period, whereas metabolic acidosis tended to be more severe in MMA and PA patients with late onset of symptoms. Symptomatic patients without metabolic crises (n = 94) often presented with a movement disorder, mental retardation, epilepsy and psychiatric disorders (the latter in UCD only).
Conclusions
The initial presentation varies widely in OAD and UCD patients. This is a challenge for rapid diagnosis and early start of treatment. Patients with a sepsis-like neonatal crisis and those with late-onset of symptoms are both at risk of delayed or missed diagnosis.
Journal Article
The phenotypic spectrum of organic acidurias and urea cycle disorders. Part 2: the evolving clinical phenotype
2015
Background
The disease course and long-term outcome of patients with organic acidurias (OAD) and urea cycle disorders (UCD) are incompletely understood.
Aims
To evaluate the complex clinical phenotype of OAD and UCD patients at different ages.
Results
Acquired microcephaly and movement disorders were common in OAD and UCD highlighting that the brain is the major organ involved in these diseases. Cardiomyopathy [methylmalonic (MMA) and propionic aciduria (PA)], prolonged QT
c
interval (PA), optic nerve atrophy [MMA, isovaleric aciduria (IVA)], pancytopenia (PA), and macrocephaly [glutaric aciduria type 1 (GA1)] were exclusively found in OAD patients, whereas hepatic involvement was more frequent in UCD patients, in particular in argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) deficiency. Chronic renal failure was often found in MMA, with highest frequency in mut
0
patients. Unexpectedly, chronic renal failure was also observed in adolescent and adult patients with GA1 and ASL deficiency. It had a similar frequency in patients with or without a movement disorder suggesting different pathophysiology. Thirteen patients (classic OAD: 3, UCD: 10) died during the study interval, ten of them during the initial metabolic crisis in the newborn period. Male patients with late-onset ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency were presumably overrepresented in the study population.
Conclusions
Neurologic impairment is common in OAD and UCD, whereas the involvement of other organs (heart, liver, kidneys, eyes) follows a disease-specific pattern. The identification of unexpected chronic renal failure in GA1 and ASL deficiency emphasizes the importance of a systematic follow-up in patients with rare diseases.
Journal Article
Clinical characteristics and long-term outcomes of 101 patients with urea cycle disorders in China
2025
Background
Urea cycle disorders (UCDs) are a group of rare genetic metabolic disorders characterized by hyperammonemia, which can lead to neurological damage, systemic complications, and even death. Understanding UCDs’ clinical features and progression in the Chinese population will fill research gaps and benefit patients globally.
Methods
This retrospective study evaluated the clinical, biochemical, genetic characteristics, and long-term outcomes in 101 Chinese patients with six subtypes of UCDs between 2007 and 2024. Data were collected from medical records and analyzed.
Results
The overall survival rate was 93.0% among UCD patients. An equal gender ratio was observed in ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. Newborn screening (NBS) was conducted in this cohort, and 57.0% of patients were diagnosed through NBS. Neurological and gastrointestinal symptoms were the most common. Symptoms often appeared within the first year, especially in the first month. Arginine was the most frequently used treatment, with glycerol phenylbutyrate often used as a nitrogen scavenger in severe cases. Biochemical analysis showed subtype-specific differences, including notable declines in leucine and glycine on low-protein diets. Genetic analysis revealed a wide distribution of mutations, with few hotspots and 17 newly identified mutations. Clinically diagnosed patients had worse outcomes than those diagnosed via newborn screening.
Conclusion
This study is the first to describe the clinical features and long-term outcomes of UCDs in a large sample of Chinese patients, highlighting the importance of newborn screening for early diagnosis and improved treatment outcomes.
Journal Article
Age at disease onset and peak ammonium level rather than interventional variables predict the neurological outcome in urea cycle disorders
by
Garcia-Cazorla, Angeles
,
Brassier, Anaïs
,
Häberle, Johannes
in
Adolescent
,
Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors - diagnosis
,
Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors - metabolism
2016
Background
Patients with urea cycle disorders (UCDs) have an increased risk of neurological disease manifestation.
Aims
Determining the effect of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions on the neurological outcome.
Methods
Evaluation of baseline, regular follow-up and emergency visits of 456 UCD patients prospectively followed between 2011 and 2015 by the E-IMD patient registry.
Results
About two-thirds of UCD patients remained asymptomatic until age 12 days [i.e. the median age at diagnosis of patients identified by newborn screening (NBS)] suggesting a potential benefit of NBS. In fact, NBS lowered the age at diagnosis in patients with late onset of symptoms (>28 days), and a trend towards improved long-term neurological outcome was found for patients with argininosuccinate synthetase and lyase deficiency as well as argininemia identified by NBS. Three to 17 different drug combinations were used for maintenance therapy, but superiority of any single drug or specific drug combination above other combinations was not demonstrated. Importantly, non-interventional variables of disease severity, such as age at disease onset and peak ammonium level of the initial hyperammonemic crisis (cut-off level: 500 μmol/L) best predicted the neurological outcome.
Conclusions
Promising results of NBS for late onset UCD patients are reported and should be re-evaluated in a larger and more advanced age group. However, non-interventional variables affect the neurological outcome of UCD patients. Available evidence-based guideline recommendations are currently heterogeneously implemented into practice, leading to a high variability of drug combinations that hamper our understanding of optimised long-term and emergency treatment.
Journal Article
Long-term outcome and intervention of urea cycle disorders in Japan
by
Shigematsu, Yosuke
,
Kasahara, Mureo
,
Takayanagi, Masaki
in
Age of Onset
,
Ammonia - blood
,
Ammonia - metabolism
2012
Urea cycle disorders (UCDs) are one of the most frequently inherited metabolic diseases in Japan, with an estimated prevalence of 1 per 50,000 live births. Here, we investigated the clinical manifestations, treatment, and prognosis of 177 patients with UCDs who were evaluated and treated from January 1999 to March 2009. These included 77 cases of neonatal-onset UCDs and 91 cases of late-onset UCDs. The most common UCD was ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD), which accounted for 116 out of 177 patients. This result is similar to a previous study performed between 1978 and 1995 in Japan: OTCD accounted for about two-thirds of the total number of UCD cases. We studied the relationship between prognosis and the peak blood ammonia level at the onset in 151 UCD patients. Compared with a previous survey conducted in Japan, we found that a greater number of patients survived without any mental retardation despite their peak blood ammonia levels being greater than 360 μmol/l. The 5-year survival rate of patients with OTCD improved to 86% for those with the neonatal-onset type and to 92% for those with the late-onset type. We hypothesize that the increased survival rate is due to early diagnosis and better treatments that are now available in Japan. It is very important to diagnose and treat UCDs, especially OTCD, when the blood ammonia levels in patients are low. The outcome in patients with low blood ammonia levels was better than that in patients with high blood ammonia levels.
Journal Article
Long-term effects of medical management on growth and weight in individuals with urea cycle disorders
2020
Low protein diet and sodium or glycerol phenylbutyrate, two pillars of recommended long-term therapy of individuals with urea cycle disorders (UCDs), involve the risk of iatrogenic growth failure. Limited evidence-based studies hamper our knowledge on the long-term effects of the proposed medical management in individuals with UCDs. We studied the impact of medical management on growth and weight development in 307 individuals longitudinally followed by the Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium (UCDC) and the European registry and network for Intoxication type Metabolic Diseases (E-IMD). Intrauterine growth of all investigated UCDs and postnatal linear growth of asymptomatic individuals remained unaffected. Symptomatic individuals were at risk of progressive growth retardation independent from the underlying disease and the degree of natural protein restriction. Growth impairment was determined by disease severity and associated with reduced or borderline plasma branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) concentrations. Liver transplantation appeared to have a beneficial effect on growth. Weight development remained unaffected both in asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals. Progressive growth impairment depends on disease severity and plasma BCAA concentrations, but cannot be predicted by the amount of natural protein intake alone. Future clinical trials are necessary to evaluate whether supplementation with BCAAs might improve growth in UCDs.
Journal Article
Understanding the Natural History and the Effects of Current Therapeutic Strategies on Urea Cycle Disorders: Insights from the UCD Spanish Registry
by
Pérez, Belén
,
Dios, Elena
,
Martín-Hernández, Elena
in
Adolescent
,
Ammonia
,
Argininosuccinic Aciduria - epidemiology
2025
Background/Objectives: The present study updates the Spanish registry of patients with urea cycle disorders (UCD), originally established in 2013, to provide comprehensive epidemiological data and evaluate the impact of therapeutic strategies and newborn screening (NBS) on clinical outcomes. Methods: This retrospective, multicenter study focuses on 255 Spanish UCD patients. It includes all living and deceased cases up to February 2024, analyzing demographic, clinical, and biochemical variables. Results: The incidence of UCD in Spain over the past decade was 1:36,063 births. The most common defects were ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) and argininosuccinate synthetase deficiency. Early-onset (EO) cases comprised 32.7%, and 10.6% were diagnosed through NBS. Global mortality was 14.9%, higher in carbamoylphosphate synthetase 1 deficiency (36.8%) and male OTCD patients (32.1%) compared to other defects (p = 0.013). EO cases presented a higher mortality rate (35.8%) than late-onset (LO) cases (7.1%) (p < 0.0001). The median ammonia level in deceased patients was higher at 1058 µmol/L (IQR 410–1793) than in survivors at 294 µmol/L (IQR 71–494) (p < 0.0001). Diagnosis through NBS improved survival and reduced neurological impairment compared to symptomatic diagnosis. Neurological impairment occurred in 44% of patients, with worse neurological outcomes observed in patients with argininosuccinate lyase deficiency, arginase 1 deficiency, hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria, EO presentations, pre-2014 diagnosis, and patients with higher levels of ammonia at diagnosis. Among transplanted patients (20.6%), survival was 95.2%, with no significant neurological differences compared to non-transplanted patients. Conclusions: This updated analysis highlights the positive impact of NBS and advanced treatments on mortality and neurologic outcomes. Persistent neurological challenges underscore the need for further therapeutic strategies.
Journal Article
Improving long term outcomes in urea cycle disorders-report from the Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium
by
Gropman, Andrea L.
,
Waisbren, Susan E.
,
Batshaw, Mark L.
in
Adult
,
Biochemistry
,
Canada - epidemiology
2016
The Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium (UCDC) has conducted, beginning in 2006, a longitudinal study (LS) of eight enzyme deficiencies/transporter defects associated with the urea cycle. These include N-acetylglutamate synthase deficiency (NAGSD); Carbamyl phosphate synthetase 1 deficiency (CPS1D); Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD); Argininosuccinate synthetase deficiency (ASSD) (Citrullinemia); Argininosuccinate lyase deficiency (ASLD) (Argininosuccinic aciduria); Arginase deficiency (ARGD, Argininemia); Hyperornithinemia, hyperammonemia, homocitrullinuria (HHH) syndrome (or mitochondrial ornithine transporter 1 deficiency [ORNT1D]); and Citrullinemia type II (mitochondrial aspartate/glutamate carrier deficiency [CITRIN]). There were 678 UCD patients enrolled in 14 sites in the U.S., Canada, and Europe at the writing of this paper. This review summarizes findings of the consortium related to outcome, focusing primarily on neuroimaging findings and neurocognitive function. Neuroimaging studies in late onset OTCD offered evidence that brain injury caused by biochemical dysregulation may impact functional neuroanatomy serving working memory processes, an important component of executive function and regulation. Additionally, there were alteration in white mater microstructure and functional connectivity at rest. Intellectual deficits in OTCD and other urea cycle disorders (UCD) vary. However, when neuropsychological deficits occur, they tend to be more prominent in motor/performance areas on both intelligence tests and other measures. In some disorders, adults performed significantly less well than younger patients. Further longitudinal follow-up will reveal whether this is due to declines throughout life or to improvements in diagnostics (especially newborn screening) and treatments in the younger generation of patients.
Journal Article
Relationship between longitudinal changes in neuropsychological outcome and disease biomarkers in urea cycle disorders
by
McCarter, Robert
,
Lichter-Konecki, Uta
,
Sanz, Jacqueline H.
in
Ammonia
,
Biomarkers
,
Clinical Research Article
2023
Background
Urea cycle disorders (UCDs) cause impaired conversion of waste nitrogen to urea leading to rise in glutamine and ammonia. Elevated ammonia and glutamine have been implicated in brain injury. This study assessed relationships between biomarkers of metabolic control and long-term changes in neuropsychological test scores in participants of the longitudinal study of UCDs. The hypothesis was that elevated ammonia and glutamine are associated with neuropsychological impairment.
Methods
Data from 146 participants who completed 2 neuropsychological assessments were analyzed. Neuropsychological tests that showed significant changes in scores over time were identified and associations between score change and interim metabolic biomarker levels were investigated.
Results
Participants showed a significant decrease in performance on visual motor integration (VMI) and verbal learning immediate-recall. A decrease in scores was associated with experiencing interim hyperammonemic events (HAE) and frequency of HAE. Outside of HAE there was a significant association between median ammonia levels ≥50µmol/L and impaired VMI.
Conclusion
VMI and memory encoding are specifically affected in UCDs longitudinally, indicating that patients experience difficulties when required to integrate motor and visual functions and learn new information. Only ammonia biomarkers showed a significant association with impairment. Preventing HAE and controlling ammonia levels is key in UCD management.
Impact
The Beery-Buktenica Developmental Test of Visual-Motor Integration (Beery VMI) and List A Trial 5 of the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT) may be good longitudinal biomarkers of treatment outcome in urea cycle disorders (UCD).
This is the first report of longitudinal biomarkers for treatment outcome in UCD.
These two biomarkers of outcome may be useful for clinical trials assessing new treatments for UCD. These results will also inform educators how to design interventions directed at improving learning in individuals with UCDs.
Journal Article