Longitudinal Assessment of Intellectual Achievement in Patients With Classical Galactosemia

Author:

Schadewaldt Peter12,Hoffmann Björn2,Hammen Hans-Werner12,Kamp Gudrun2,Schweitzer-Krantz Susanne3,Wendel Udo2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Pathobiochemistry, Deutsches Diabetes Zentrum, Düsseldorf, Germany;

2. Department of General Pediatrics, University Hospital Düsseldorf, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany; and

3. Children's Hospital, Evangelisches Krankenhaus, Düsseldorf, Germany

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To conduct a longitudinal assessment of long-term cognitive outcome in patients with classical galactosemia. METHODS: Inclusion criteria were (1) previous assessment of IQ dating back >10 years with tests being comparable with the recent German tests HAWIK-III and HAWIE-R, (2) absence of illnesses other than galactosemia, (3) absence of foreign language problems, (4) enzymatic-metabolic proof of classical galactosemia, (5) compliance with dietary therapy, and (6) written informed consent. Twenty-three patients who fulfilled these criteria were found. They underwent the first IQ test at a mean age of 11 ± 5 years and the second 13.6 to 15.5 years later at a mean age of 26 ± 5 years. Results were corrected for the obsolescence of test norms (Flynn effect). RESULTS: Mean total IQ scores on the first and second tests were 78 ± 14 and 73 ± 15, respectively, and not significantly different. IQ scores in the average range were observed for 7 patients on the first test and for 5 patients on the second test. For 17 patients, the intraindividual IQ scores remained essentially unchanged. Five patients showed a decrease and 1 an increase of the IQ score over time. No consistent pattern of change was found with respect to performance or verbal IQ subscores or in achievements in the individual subtest. CONCLUSIONS: The results confirm the presence of reduced cognitive ability in classical galactosemia and present evidence for an absence of substantial galactosemia-induced aggravation of this impairment with increasing age, at least in patients from 4 to 40 years of age. It remains to be clarified whether a reduction of cognitive function in galactosemia may be initiated by an in utero toxicity of endogenously formed galactose and which role such a process may play in the development of intellectual deficiencies that are later maintained throughout life.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference68 articles.

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