Pompe Disease in Infants: Improving the Prognosis by Newborn Screening and Early Treatment

Author:

Chien Yin-Hsiu12,Lee Ni-Chung12,Thurberg Beth L.3,Chiang Shu-Chuan2,Zhang Xiaokui Kate3,Keutzer Joan3,Huang Ai-Chu2,Wu Mei-Hwan1,Huang Pei-Hsin4,Tsai Fuu-Jen5,Chen Yuan-Tsong6,Hwu Wuh-Liang125

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Pediatrics

2. Medical Genetics

3. Genzyme Corporation, Cambridge, Massachusetts

4. Pathology, National Taiwan University Hospital and National Taiwan University School of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan

5. Graduate Institute of Integrated Medicine, College of Chinese Medicine, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan

6. Institute of Biomedical Science, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Pompe disease causes progressive, debilitating, and often life-threatening musculoskeletal, respiratory, and cardiac symptoms. Favorable outcomes with early intravenous enzyme-replacement therapy and alglucosidase alfa have been reported, but early clinical diagnosis before the development of severe symptoms has rarely been possible in infants. METHODS: We recently conducted a newborn screening pilot program in Taiwan to improve the early detection of Pompe disease. Six of 206088 newborns screened tested positive and were treated for Pompe disease. Five had the rapidly progressive form of Pompe disease, characterized by cardiac and motor involvement, and were treated soon after diagnosis. The sixth patient was started on treatment at 14 months of age because of progressive muscle weakness. Outcomes were compared with treated patients whose disease was diagnosed clinically and with untreated historical control subjects. RESULTS: At the time of this report, patients had been treated for 14 to 32 months. The 5 infants who had early cardiac involvement demonstrated normalization of cardiac size and muscle pathology with normal physical growth and age-appropriate gains in motor development. The infant without cardiac involvement also achieved normal motor development with treatment. Survival in patients who had newborn screening was significantly improved compared with those in the untreated reference cohort (P = .001). Survival in the treated clinical comparators was reduced but not statistically different from that in the newborn screening group (P = .48). CONCLUSIONS: Results from this study indicate that early treatment can benefit infants with Pompe disease and highlight the advantages of early diagnosis, which can be achieved by newborn screening.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference30 articles.

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2. Hirschhorn R. Glycogen storage disease type II: acid alpha-glucosidase (acid maltose) deficiency. In: Scriver CR, ed. The Metabolic and Molecular Bases of Inherited Disease. 8th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2001:3389–3420

3. Bashan N, Potashnik R, Barash V, Gutman A, Moses SW. Glycogen storage disease type II in Israel. Isr J Med Sci. 1988;24(4–5):224–227

4. Lin CY, Shieh JJ. Molecular study on the infantile form of Pompe disease in Chinese in Taiwan. Zhonghua Min Guo Xiao Er Ke Yi Xue Hui Za Zhi. 1996;37(2):115–121

5. Kishnani PS, Hwu WL, Mandel H, Nicolino M, Yong F, Corzo D. A retrospective, multinational, multicenter study on the natural history of infantile-onset Pompe disease. J Pediatr. 2006;148(5):671–676

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