Abstract

BackgroundGuanidinoacetate methyltransferase (GAMT) deficiency causes cerebral creatine deficiency. Patients can have autistic behavior, seizures, intellectual disability, and severe speech delay. The goal of therapy is to increase creatine while reducing potentially neurotoxic guanidinoacetate concentrations. Here we evaluate how different therapies affect plasma guanidinoacetate levels in patients with GAMT deficiency. MethodsRetrospective analysis of data from five new patients with GAMT deficiency (four with delays and seizures, one diagnosed at birth). ResultsThe four symptomatic patients had decreased brain creatine by magnetic resonance spectroscopy and three also had abnormal globi pallidi by MRI. GAMT sequencing identified four previously reported mutations and one novel missense mutation (c.233T>A/p.V78E). Treatment with creatine (250–1000mg/kg/day), ornithine (100–800mg/kg/day), and sodium benzoate (50–135mg/kg/day) supplements along with dietary protein restriction (0.8–1.5g/kg/day) improved seizures and development with all patients becoming verbal. The patient treated at birth remains developmentally normal. Reduction in glycine and increase in ornithine levels significantly decreased plasma guanidinoacetate, with glycine levels being the best predictor of guanidinoacetate levels. In contrast, arginine levels were not significantly correlated with plasma guanidinoacetate. ConclusionsOur results show that supplements of creatine, sodium benzoate (to reduce glycine) and ornithine reduce guanidinoacetate levels in patients with GAMT deficiency (dietary therapy was not evaluated in our study). Normal development with early therapy renders GAMT deficiency an ideal candidate for inclusion in newborn screening panels.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call