TY - JOUR
T1 - Are asymptomatic carriers of OTC deficiency always asymptomatic? A multicentric retrospective study of risk using the UCDC longitudinal study database
AU - Members of the Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium (UCDC)
AU - Sen, Kuntal
AU - Izem, Rima
AU - Long, Yuelin
AU - Jiang, Jiji
AU - Konczal, Laura L.
AU - McCarter, Robert J.
AU - Mew, Nicholas Ah
AU - Baumgartner, Matthias R.
AU - Berry, Gerard
AU - Berry, Susan A.
AU - Burgard, Peter
AU - Burrage, Lindsay C.
AU - Cederbaum, Stephen
AU - Coughlin, Curtis
AU - Diaz, George A.
AU - Enns, Gregory
AU - Gallagher, Renata C.
AU - Harding, Cary O.
AU - Hoffmann, Georg F.
AU - Le Mons, Cynthia
AU - McCandless, Shawn E.
AU - Merritt, J. Lawrence
AU - Nagamani, Sandesh C.S.
AU - Schulze, Andreas
AU - Seminara, Jennifer
AU - Stricker, Tamar
AU - Tuchman, Mendel
AU - Waisbren, Susan
AU - Weisfeld-Adams, James D.
AU - Wong, Derek
AU - Yudkoff, Marc
AU - Gropman, Andrea L.
AU - Bedoyan, Jirair K.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - Background: Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) due to an X-linked OTC mutation, is responsible for moderate to severe hyperammonemia (HA) with substantial morbidity and mortality. About 80% of females with OTCD remain apparently “asymptomatic” with limited studies of their clinical characteristics and long-term health vulnerabilities. Multimodal neuroimaging studies and executive function testing have shown that asymptomatic females exhibit limitations when stressed to perform at higher cognitive load and had reduced activation of the prefrontal cortex. This retrospective study aims to improve understanding of factors that might predict development of defined complications and serious illness in apparent asymptomatic females. A proband and her daughter are presented to highlight the utility of multimodal neuroimaging studies and to underscore that asymptomatic females with OTCD are not always asymptomatic. Methods: We review data from 302 heterozygote females with OTCD enrolled in the Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium (UCDC) longitudinal natural history database. We apply multiple neuroimaging modalities in the workup of a proband and her daughter. Results: Among the females in the database, 143 were noted as symptomatic at baseline (Sym). We focused on females who were asymptomatic (Asx, n = 111) and those who were asymptomatic initially upon enrollment in study but who later became symptomatic sometime during follow-up (Asx/Sym, n = 22). The majority of Asx (86%) and Asx/Sym (75%) subjects did not restrict protein at baseline, and ~38% of Asx and 33% of Asx/Sym subjects suffered from mild to severe neuropsychiatric conditions such as mood disorder and sleep problems. The risk of mild to severe HA sometime later in life for the Asx and Asx/Sym subjects as a combined group was ~4% (5/133), with ammonia ranging from 77 to 470 μM and at least half (2/4) of subjects requiring hospital admission and nitrogen scavenger therapy. For this combined group, the median age of first HA crisis was 50 years, whereas the median age of first symptom which included neuropsychiatric and/or behavioral symptoms was 17 years. The multimodal neuroimaging studies in female heterozygotes with OTCD also underscore that asymptomatic female heterozygotes with OTCD (e.g., proband) are not always asymptomatic. Conclusions: Analysis of Asx and Asx/Sym females with OTCD in this study suggests that future evidence-based management guidelines and/or a clinical risk score calculator for this cohort could be useful management tools to reduce morbidity and improve long-term quality of life.
AB - Background: Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) due to an X-linked OTC mutation, is responsible for moderate to severe hyperammonemia (HA) with substantial morbidity and mortality. About 80% of females with OTCD remain apparently “asymptomatic” with limited studies of their clinical characteristics and long-term health vulnerabilities. Multimodal neuroimaging studies and executive function testing have shown that asymptomatic females exhibit limitations when stressed to perform at higher cognitive load and had reduced activation of the prefrontal cortex. This retrospective study aims to improve understanding of factors that might predict development of defined complications and serious illness in apparent asymptomatic females. A proband and her daughter are presented to highlight the utility of multimodal neuroimaging studies and to underscore that asymptomatic females with OTCD are not always asymptomatic. Methods: We review data from 302 heterozygote females with OTCD enrolled in the Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium (UCDC) longitudinal natural history database. We apply multiple neuroimaging modalities in the workup of a proband and her daughter. Results: Among the females in the database, 143 were noted as symptomatic at baseline (Sym). We focused on females who were asymptomatic (Asx, n = 111) and those who were asymptomatic initially upon enrollment in study but who later became symptomatic sometime during follow-up (Asx/Sym, n = 22). The majority of Asx (86%) and Asx/Sym (75%) subjects did not restrict protein at baseline, and ~38% of Asx and 33% of Asx/Sym subjects suffered from mild to severe neuropsychiatric conditions such as mood disorder and sleep problems. The risk of mild to severe HA sometime later in life for the Asx and Asx/Sym subjects as a combined group was ~4% (5/133), with ammonia ranging from 77 to 470 μM and at least half (2/4) of subjects requiring hospital admission and nitrogen scavenger therapy. For this combined group, the median age of first HA crisis was 50 years, whereas the median age of first symptom which included neuropsychiatric and/or behavioral symptoms was 17 years. The multimodal neuroimaging studies in female heterozygotes with OTCD also underscore that asymptomatic female heterozygotes with OTCD (e.g., proband) are not always asymptomatic. Conclusions: Analysis of Asx and Asx/Sym females with OTCD in this study suggests that future evidence-based management guidelines and/or a clinical risk score calculator for this cohort could be useful management tools to reduce morbidity and improve long-term quality of life.
KW - Urea Cycle Disorders Consortium
KW - diffusion tensor imaging
KW - functional MRI
KW - functional near-infrared spectroscopy
KW - hyperammonemia
KW - magnetic resonance spectroscopy
KW - ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
KW - prefrontal cortex
KW - urea cycle disorder
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85190868219
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85190868219#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1002/mgg3.2443
DO - 10.1002/mgg3.2443
M3 - Article
C2 - 38634223
AN - SCOPUS:85190868219
SN - 2324-9269
VL - 12
JO - Molecular Genetics and Genomic Medicine
JF - Molecular Genetics and Genomic Medicine
IS - 4
M1 - e2443
ER -