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Cystathionine β-Synthase Deficiency in the E-HOD Registry—Part II: Dietary and Pharmacological Treatment

  • Andrew A.M. Morris*
  • , Jitka Sokolová
  • , E-HOD consortium
  • , Markéta Pavlíková
  • , Florian Gleich
  • , Stefan Kölker
  • , Carlo Dionisi-Vici
  • , Matthias R. Baumgartner
  • , Luciana Hannibal
  • , Henk J. Blom
  • , Martina Huemer
  • , Viktor Kožich*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University Hospital of South Manchester
  • Charles University
  • Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg
  • IRCCS Ospedale pediatrico Bambino Gesù - Roma
  • University of Zurich
  • University of Freiburg
  • Landeskrankenhaus Bregenz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
59 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) deficiency (classical homocystinuria) has a wide range of severity. Mildly affected patients typically present as adults with thromboembolism and respond to treatment with pyridoxine. Severely affected patients usually present during childhood with learning difficulties, ectopia lentis and skeletal abnormalities; they are pyridoxine non-responders (NR) or partial responders (PR) and require treatment with a low-methionine diet and/or betaine. The European network and registry for Homocystinurias and methylation Defects (E-HOD) has published management guidelines for CBS deficiency and recommended keeping plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) concentrations below 100 μmol/L. We have now analysed data from 311 patients in the registry to see how closely treatment follows the guidelines. Pyridoxine-responsive patients generally achieved tHcy concentrations below 50 μmol/L, but many NRs and PRs had a mean tHcy considerably above 100 μmol/L. Most NRs were managed with betaine and a special diet. This usually involved severe protein restriction and a methionine-free amino acid mixture, but some patients had a natural protein intake substantially above the WHO safe minimum. Work is needed on the methionine content of dietary protein as estimates vary widely. Contrary to the guidelines, most NRs were on pyridoxine, sometimes at dangerously high doses. tHcy concentrations were similar in groups prescribed high or low betaine doses and natural protein intakes. High tHcy levels were probably often due to poor compliance. Comparing time-to-event graphs for NR patients detected by newborn screening and those ascertained clinically showed that treatment could prevent thromboembolism (risk ratio 0.073) and lens dislocation (risk ratio 0.069).

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12844
JournalJournal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
Volume48
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM.

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