The natural history of dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase deficiency in Israel

Author:

Pode‐Shakked Ben12,Landau Yuval E.23,Shaul Lotan Nava4,Manor Joshua12,Haham Nitsan5,Kristal Eyal67,Hershkovitz Eli789,Hazan Guy79,Haham Yarden2,Almashanu Shlomo10,Anikster Yair12,Staretz‐Chacham Orna78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Metabolic Disease Unit, Edmond and Lily Safra Children's Hospital Sheba Medical Center Tel‐Hashomer Israel

2. School of Medicine, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences Tel‐Aviv University Tel‐Aviv Israel

3. Metabolic Disease Unit Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel Petah‐Tikva Israel

4. Department of Genetics Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center Jerusalem Israel

5. Pediatrics Department, Edmond and Lily Safra Children's Hospital Sheba Medical Center Tel‐Hashomer Israel

6. Pediatric Ambulatory Day Unit Soroka Medical Center Beer Sheva Israel

7. Faculty of Health Sciences Ben‐Gurion University Beer Sheva Israel

8. Metabolic Clinic, Pediatric Division Soroka University Medical Center Beer Sheva Israel

9. Pediatric Department D Soroka University Medical Center Beer Sheva Israel

10. National Newborn Screening Program, Public Health Services Ministry of Health Ramat‐Gan Israel

Abstract

AbstractDihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (DLD) deficiency is an ultra‐rare autosomal‐recessive inborn error of metabolism, affecting no less than five mitochondrial multienzyme complexes. With approximately 30 patients reported to date, DLD deficiency was associated with three major clinical presentations: an early‐onset encephalopathic phenotype with metabolic acidosis, a predominantly hepatic presentation with liver failure, and a rare myopathic phenotype. To elucidate the demographic, phenotypic, and molecular characteristics of patients with DLD deficiency within the Israeli population, data were collected from metabolic disease specialists in four large tertiary medical centers in the center and south of Israel. Pediatric and adult patients with biallelic variants in DLD were included in the study. A total of 53 patients of 35 families were included in the cohort. Age at presentation ranged between birth and 10 years. Wide phenotypic variability was observed, from asymptomatic individuals in their sixth decade of life, to severe, neonatal‐onset disease with devastating neurological sequelae. Six DLD variants were noted, the most common of which was the c.685G>T (p.G229C) variant in homozygous form (24/53 patients, 45.3%; 13/35 families), observed mostly among patients of Ashkenazi‐Jewish descent, followed by the homozygous c.1436A>T (p.D479V) variant, found in 20 patients of Bedouin descent (37.7%; 16/35 families). Overall, patients did not necessarily present as one of the previously described distinct clinical phenotypes. DLD deficiency is a panethnic disorder, with significant phenotypic variability, and comprises a continuum, rather than three distinct clinical presentations.

Publisher

Wiley

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