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Treatment

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

A low phenylalanine diet should be instituted before the end of the first month of life to ensure normal intellectual development. Guidance recommend that a low phenylalanine diet should be continued throughout adult life (1).

The diet for PKU can be very complicated to follow and is often considered to be unpalatable

  • it issometimes difficult for people to adhere to the diet strictly, if at all.
  • researchers have investigated other potential therapies which would facilitate compliance to treatment (2). Supplementation of the diet with tyrosine is one such therapy which has been studied in PKU
    • a systematic review concluded (3)
      • from the available evidence no recommendations can be made about whether tyrosine supplementation should be introduced intoroutine clinical practice

NICE have stated (4):

  • sapropterin is recommended as an option for treating hyperphenylalaninaemia that responds to sapropterin (response as defined in the summary of product characteristics) in people with phenylketonuria (PKU), only if they are:
    • under18 and a dose of 10mg/kg is used, only using a higher dose if target blood phenylalanine levels cannot be achieved at 10mg/kg
    • aged 18 to 21 inclusive, continuing the dose they were having before turning 18 or at a maximum dose of 10mg/kg
    • pregnant (from a positive pregnancy test until birth)

Notes (5,6):

  • PKU patients, who are deficient in phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH), and patients with BH4 deficiency, are unable to convert phenylalanine from the diet
    • PAH hydroxylates phenylalanine through an oxidative reaction with tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) as co-factor to form tyrosine
    • deficiency for either PAH or BH4 can result in high blood phenylalanine concentrations, which are toxic to the brain and can lead to neurological and behavioural disorders such as lower intelligence, decreased mental concentration, slowed reaction time, depression and phobias
    • dietary restrictions in order to minimize phenylalanine intake are difficult to maintain and often cause other deficiencies
  • sapropterin dihydrochloride is a synthetic form of cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4)
    • excess of cofactor activates residual PAH enzyme, improving phenylalanine metabolism and decreasing phenylalanine concentrations in the blood of PKU patients
    • in patients with BH4 deficiency, sapropterin provides an effective alternative to BH4
    • PKU patients treated with sapropterin must continue their restricted phenylalanine diet and undergo regular clinical assessment (monitoring of blood phenylalanine and tyrosine concentrations, nutrient intake and psychomotor development)

Reference:


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