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Adenosine kinase deficiency: expanding the clinical spectrum and evaluating therapeutic options
Authors:Christian Staufner  Martin Lindner  Carlo Dionisi-Vici  Peter Freisinger  Dries Dobbelaere  Claire Douillard  Nawal Makhseed  Beate K. Straub  Kimia Kahrizi  Diana Ballhausen  Giancarlo la Marca  Stefan Kölker  Dorothea Haas  Georg F. Hoffmann  Sarah C. Grünert  Henk J. Blom
Affiliation:1.Department of General Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Metabolic Medicine and Neuropediatrics,University Hospital Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany;2.Department of Neurology,University Children’s Hospital Frankfurt,Frankfurt,Germany;3.Division of Metabolism,Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital IRCCS,Rome,Italy;4.Children’s Hospital Reutlingen,Reutlingen,Germany;5.Reference Center for Inherited Metabolic Diseases in Child and Adulthood,University Children’s Hospital Jeanne de Flandre,Lille Cedex,France;6.Department of Pediatrics,Jahra Hospital,Jahra,Kuwait;7.Institute of Pathology,University Hospital Heidelberg,Heidelberg,Germany;8.Genetics Research Center,University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences,Tehran,Iran;9.Center for molecular diseases,CHUV Lausanne,Lausanne,Switzerland;10.Newborn Screening, Clinical Chemistry and Pharmacology Lab, NeuroFarba Department,Meyer Children’s University Hospital,Florence,Italy;11.Center for Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine,University Hospital Freiburg,Freiburg,Germany
Abstract:

Background

Adenosine kinase deficiency is a recently described defect affecting methionine metabolism with a severe clinical phenotype comprising mainly neurological and hepatic impairment and dysmorphism.

Methods

Clinical data of 11 additional patients from eight families with adenosine kinase deficiency were gathered through a retrospective questionnaire. Two liver biopsies of one patient were systematically evaluated.

Results

The main clinical symptoms are mild to severe liver dysfunction with neonatal onset, muscular hypotonia, global developmental retardation and dysmorphism (especially frontal bossing). Hepatic involvement is not a constant finding. Most patients have epilepsy and recurrent hypoglycemia due to hyperinsulinism. Major biochemical findings are intermittent hypermethioninemia, increased S-adenosylmethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine in plasma and increased adenosine in urine. S-adenosylmethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine are the most reliable biochemical markers. The major histological finding was pronounced microvesicular hepatic steatosis. Therapeutic trials with a methionine restricted diet indicate a potential beneficial effect on biochemical and clinical parameters in four patients and hyperinsulinism was responsive to diazoxide in two patients.

Conclusion

Adenosine kinase deficiency is a severe inborn error at the cross-road of methionine and adenosine metabolism that mainly causes dysmorphism, brain and liver symptoms, but also recurrent hypoglycemia. The clinical phenotype varies from an exclusively neurological to a multi-organ manifestation. Methionine-restricted diet should be considered as a therapeutic option.
Keywords:
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