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Evaluation of valproate effects on acylcarnitine in epileptic children by LC-MS/MS
Authors:Nakajima Yoko  Ito Tetsuya  Maeda Yasuhiro  Ichiki Sayaka  Kobayashi Satoru  Ando Naoki  Hussein Mohamed Hamed  Kurono Yukihisa  Sugiyama Naruji  Togari Hajime
Affiliation:a Department of Pediatrics and Neonatology, Nagoya City University, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagoya, Japan
b Laboratory of Hospital Pharmacy, Nagoya City University, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nagoya, Japan
c Department of Maternal and Child Health, VACSERA, Giza, Egypt
d Department of Pediatrics, Aichi-Gakuin University, School of Pharmacy, Nagoya, Japan
Abstract:Background: Valproate (VPA) is a simple fatty acid and a substrate for the fatty acid β-oxidation pathway. Previous data suggested that the toxicity of VPA may be provoked by carnitine deficiency and the inhibition of mitochondrial β-oxidation. Objective: The aim of the present study was to elucidate the effect of VPA treatment on carnitine and isomer-differentiated acylcarnitine disposition, and determined the relationships between acylcarnitines and blood VPA levels in long-term treated patients with VPA and/or other antiepileptic drugs. Methods: Serum samples were obtained from children aged 1-15 years old treated for at least 6 months with VPA alone (n = 28) or VPA combined with other anticonvulsants (n = 23) and untreated controls (n = 23). Serum acylcarnitines were separated from their isomers and quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Results: We found higher 3-hydroxyisovalerylcarnitine levels and trace amounts of valproylcarnitine in both VPA monotherapy and polytherapy patients. Other acylcarnitines, hexanoylcarnitine, C12, C14:1-carnitines and the ratio of long-chain acylcarnitine to free carnitine were also higher in VPA polytherapy individuals than in controls. VPA monotherapy does not result in decreases in free carnitine or in the accumulation of long-chain acylcarnitines. Blood VPA concentrations correlated positively with hexanoylcarnitine, C12, C14:1, C16:1, C18:1-carnitines in all VPA-treated children (n = 51). Conclusion: Long-term VPA treatment in pediatric patients could affect some specific acylcarnitines, which is enhanced by the concomitant use of other anticonvulsants, and the formation of valproylcarnitine alone seems insufficient to develop severe carnitine deficiency at therapeutic doses of VPA.
Keywords:Valproate   Epileptic children   LC-MS/MS   Valproylcarnitine   Fatty acid β-oxidation
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