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Re: Neurocognitive testing in late-onset Tay-Sachs disease: A pilot study [Letter]
Shapiro, Barbara E; Kolodny, Edwin H; Pastores, Gregory M; Luzy, Cecile
PMID: 19240988
ISSN: 1573-2665
CID: 95737
Newborn screening for Krabbe disease: the New York State model
Duffner, Patricia K; Caggana, Michele; Orsini, Joseph J; Wenger, David A; Patterson, Marc C; Crosley, Carl J; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Arnold, Georgianne L; Escolar, Maria L; Adams, Darius J; Andriola, Mary R; Aron, Alan M; Ciafaloni, Emma; Djukic, Alexandra; Erbe, Richard W; Galvin-Parton, Patricia; Helton, Laura E; Kolodny, Edwin H; Kosofsky, Barry E; Kronn, David F; Kwon, Jennifer M; Levy, Paul A; Miller-Horn, Jill; Naidich, Thomas P; Pellegrino, Joan E; Provenzale, James M; Rothman, Stanley J; Wasserstein, Melissa P
Krabbe disease is a rare inherited neurologic disorder affecting the central and peripheral nervous systems. The disease has four phenotypes: early infantile, later onset, adolescent, and adult. The only known treatment is hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, which is, in the early infantile form of the disease, most beneficial if performed before onset of clinical symptoms. In August 2006, New York State began screening all newborns for Krabbe disease. A rapid and accurate technique for assessing galactocerebrosidase activity and performing DNA mutation analysis had been developed. Interpreting these results was limited, however, because neither enzyme activity nor genetic mutation reliably predicts phenotype. A series of initiatives were therefore developed by a multidisciplinary group of neurologists, geneticists, metabolic pediatricians, neurodevelopmental pediatricians, and transplant physicians (the Krabbe Consortium of New York State) to enhance the effectiveness of the newborn screening program. A standardized clinical evaluation protocol was designed based on the available literature, criteria for transplantation for the early infantile phenotype were formulated, a clinical database and registry was developed, and a study of developmental and functional outcomes was instituted. This multidisciplinary standardized approach to evaluating infants who have positive results on newborn screening may serve as a model for other states as they begin the process of screening for Krabbe disease and other lysosomal storage disorders
PMID: 19302934
ISSN: 0887-8994
CID: 126508
Long-term efficacy and safety of laronidase in the treatment of mucopolysaccharidosis I
Clarke, Lorne A; Wraith, J Edmond; Beck, Michael; Kolodny, Edwin H; Pastores, Gregory M; Muenzer, Joseph; Rapoport, David M; Berger, Kenneth I; Sidman, Marisa; Kakkis, Emil D; Cox, Gerald F
OBJECTIVE: Our goal was to evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of recombinant human alpha-l-iduronidase (laronidase) in patients with mucopolysaccharidosis I. PATIENTS AND METHODS: All 45 patients who completed a 26-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of laronidase were enrolled in a 3.5-year open-label extension study. Mean patient age at baseline was 16 (range: 6-43) years. All patients had attenuated disease (84% Hurler-Scheie, 16% Scheie phenotypes). Clinical, biochemical, and health outcomes measures were evaluated through the extension phase. Changes are presented as the mean +/- SEM. RESULTS: All 40 patients (89%) who completed the trial received at least 80% of scheduled infusions. As shown in earlier trials, urinary glycosaminoglycan levels decreased within the first 12 weeks and liver volume decreased within the first year. Percent predicted forced vital capacity remained stable, with a linear slope of -0.78 percentage points per year. The 6-minute walk distance increased 31.7 +/- 10.2 m in the first 2 years, with a final gain of 17.1 +/- 16.8 m. Improvements in the apnea/hypopnea index (decrease of 7.6 +/- 4.5 events per hour among the patients with significant baseline sleep apnea) and shoulder flexion (increase of 17.4 degrees +/- 3.6 degrees) were most rapid during the first 2 years. Improvements in the Child Health Assessment Questionnaire/Health Assessment Questionnaire disability index (decrease of 0.31 +/- 0.11, signifying a clinically meaningful improvement in activities of daily living) were gradual and sustained over the treatment period. Laronidase infusions were generally well tolerated except in 1 patient who experienced an anaphylactic reaction. Infusion-associated reactions, which occurred in 53% of the patients, were mostly mild, easily managed, and decreased markedly after 6 months. One patient died as a result of an upper respiratory infection unrelated to treatment. Antibodies to laronidase developed in 93% of the patients; 29% of the patients were seronegative at their last assessment. CONCLUSIONS: This trial demonstrates the long-term clinical benefit and safety of laronidase in attenuated patients with mucopolysaccharidosis I and highlights the magnitude and chronology of treatment effects. Prompt diagnosis and early treatment will maximize treatment outcomes
PMID: 19117887
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 94365
Acute Confusional Migraine may be the Presenting Feature of CADASIL [Meeting Abstract]
Sathe, S; Deperalta, E; Kolodny, EH
ISI:000262112100063
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 91498
CLINICAL AND DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF 131 PATIENTS WITH NEURONOPATHIC GAUCHER DISEASE ENROLLED IN THE NEUROLOGICAL OUTCOMES SUBREGISTRY OF THE INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIVE GAUCHER GROUP GAUCHER REGISTRY [Meeting Abstract]
Tylki-Szymanska, A; Vellodi, A; El-Beshlawy, A; Cole, JA; Kolodny, E
ISI:000260943000018
ISSN: 0149-2918
CID: 90779
Enzyme replacement therapy improves skin blood flow control in Fabry patients [Meeting Abstract]
Hilz, MJ; Kolodny, EH; Marthol, H
ISI:000258379000159
ISSN: 1351-5101
CID: 98134
Late-onset Tay-Sachs disease: the spectrum of peripheral neuropathy in 30 affected patients
Shapiro, Barbara E; Logigian, Eric L; Kolodny, Edwin H; Pastores, Gregory M
Late-onset Tay-Sachs (LOTS) disease is a chronic, progressive, lysosomal storage disorder caused by a partial deficiency of beta-hexosaminidase A (HEXA) activity. Deficient levels of HEXA result in the intracellular accumulation of GM2-ganglioside, resulting in toxicity to nerve cells. Clinical manifestations primarily involve the central nervous system (CNS) and lower motor neurons, and include ataxia, weakness, spasticity, dysarthria, dysphagia, dystonia, seizures, psychosis, mania, depression, and cognitive decline. The prevalence of peripheral nervous system (PNS) involvement in LOTS has not been well documented, but it has traditionally been thought to be very low. We examined a cohort of 30 patients with LOTS who underwent clinical and electrophysiologic examination, and found evidence of a predominantly axon loss polyneuropathy affecting distal nerve segments in the lower and upper extremities in eight patients (27%)
PMID: 18642377
ISSN: 0148-639x
CID: 95739
Spontaneous appearance of Tay-Sachs disease in an animal model
Zeng, B J; Torres, P A; Viner, T C; Wang, Z H; Raghavan, S S; Alroy, J; Pastores, G M; Kolodny, E H
Tay-Sachs disease (TSD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder due to an autosomal recessively inherited deficiency of beta-hexosaminidase A (Hex A). Deficiency of Hex A in TSD is caused by a defect of the alpha-subunit resulting from mutations of the HEXA gene. To date, there is no effective treatment for TSD. Animal models of genetic diseases, similar to those known to exist in humans, are valuable and essential research tools for the study of potentially effective therapies. However, there is no ideal animal model of TSD available for use in therapeutic trials. In the present study, we report an animal model (American flamingo; Phoenicopterus ruber) of TSD with Hex A deficiency occurring spontaneously in nature, with accumulation of G(M2)-ganglioside, deficiency of Hex A enzymatic activity, and a homozygous P469L mutation in exon 12 of the hexa gene. In addition, we have isolated the full-length cDNA sequence of the flamingo, which consists of 1581 nucleotides encoding a protein of 527 amino acids. Its coding sequence indicates approximately 71% identity at the nucleotide level and about 72.5% identity at the amino acid level with the encoding region of the human HEXA gene. This animal model, with many of the same features as TSD in humans, could represent a valuable resource for investigating therapy of TSD
PMID: 18693054
ISSN: 1096-7206
CID: 93349
Enzyme replacement therapy lowers forearm and hand compliance in Fabry patients [Meeting Abstract]
Hilz, MJ; Kolodny, EH; Marthol, H
ISI:000258379000158
ISSN: 1351-5101
CID: 98133
p.[G576S; E689K]: pathogenic combination or polymorphism in Pompe disease ? [Case Report]
Kroos, Marian A; Mullaart, Reinier A; Van Vliet, Laura; Pomponio, Robert J; Amartino, Hernan; Kolodny, Edwin H; Pastores, Gregory M; Wevers, Ron A; Van der Ploeg, Ans T; Halley, Dicky J J; Reuser, Arnold J J
We discuss four cases of acid alpha-glucosidase deficiency (EC, 3.2.1.3/20) without evident symptoms of Pompe disease (OMIM No 232300) in individuals of Asian descent. In three cases, the deficiency was associated with homozygosity for the sequence variant c.[1726G>A; 2065G>A] in the acid alpha-glucosidase gene (GAA) translating into p.[G576S; E689K]. One of these cases was a patient with profound muscular atrophy, another had cardio-myopathy and the third had no symptoms. The fourth case, the mother of a child with Pompe disease, was compound heterozygote for the GAA sequence variants c.[1726G>A; 2065G>A]/c.2338G>A (p.W746X) and had no symptoms either. Further investigations revealed that c.[1726A; 2065A] is a common GAA allele in the Japanese and Chinese populations. Our limited study predicts that approximately 4% of individuals in these populations are homozygote c.[1726A; 2065A]. The height of this figure in contrast to the rarity of Pompe disease in Asian populations and the clinical history of the cases described in this paper virtually exclude that homozygosity for c.[1726A; 2065A] causes Pompe disease. As c.[1726A; 2065A] homozygotes have been observed with similarly low acid alpha-glucosidase activity as some patients with Pompe disease, we caution they may present as false positives in newborn screening programs especially in Asian populations.European Journal of Human Genetics advance online publication, 27 February 2008; doi:10.1038/ejhg.2008.34
PMID: 18301443
ISSN: 1018-4813
CID: 77799