15 research outputs found

    Monitoring phenylalanine concentrations in the follow-up of phenylketonuria patients:An inventory of pre-analytical and analytical variation

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    Background: Reliable measurement of phenylalanine (Phe) is a prerequisite for adequate follow-up of phenylketonuria (PKU) patients. However, previous studies have raised concerns on the intercomparability of plasma and dried blood spot (DBS) Phe results. In this study, we made an inventory of differences in (pre-)analytical methodology used for Phe determination across Dutch laboratories, and compared DBS and plasma results. Methods: Through an online questionnaire, we assessed (pre-)analytical Phe measurement procedures of seven Dutch metabolic laboratories. To investigate the difference between plasma and DBS Phe, participating laboratories received simultaneously collected plasma-DBS sets from 23 PKU patients. In parallel, 40 sample sets of DBS spotted from either venous blood or capillary fingerprick were analyzed. Results: Our data show that there is no consistency on standard operating procedures for Phe measurement. The association of DBS to plasma Phe concentration exhibits substantial inter-laboratory variation, ranging from a mean difference of −15.5% to +30.6% between plasma and DBS Phe concentrations. In addition, we found a mean difference of +5.8% in Phe concentration between capillary DBS and DBS prepared from venous blood. Conclusions: The results of our study point to substantial (pre-)analytical variation in Phe measurements, implicating that bloodspot Phe results should be interpreted with caution, especially when no correction factor is applied. To minimize variation, we advocate pre-analytical standardization and analytical harmonization of Phe measurements, including consensus on application of a correction factor to adjust DBS Phe to plasma concentrations

    A Delphi Survey Study to Formulate Statements on the Treatability of Inherited Metabolic Disorders to Decide on Eligibility for Newborn Screening

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    The Wilson and Jungner (W&amp;J) and Andermann criteria are meant to help select diseases eligible for population-based screening. With the introduction of next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods for newborn screening (NBS), more inherited metabolic diseases (IMDs) can technically be included, and a revision of the criteria was attempted. This study aimed to formulate statements and investigate whether those statements could elaborate on the criterion of treatability for IMDs to decide on eligibility for NBS. An online Delphi study was started among a panel of Dutch IMD experts (EPs). EPs evaluated, amended, and approved statements on treatability that were subsequently applied to 10 IMDs. After two rounds of Delphi, consensus was reached on 10 statements. Application of these statements selected 5 out of 10 IMDs proposed for this study as eligible for NBS, including 3 IMDs in the current Dutch NBS. The statement: ‘The expected benefit/burden ratio of early treatment is positive and results in a significant health outcome’ contributed most to decision-making. Our Delphi study resulted in 10 statements that can help to decide on eligibility for inclusion in NBS based on treatability, also showing that other criteria could be handled in a comparable way. Validation of the statements is required before these can be applied as guidance to authorities.</p

    A comparison of high‑throughput plasma NMR protocols for comparative untargeted metabolomics (Metabolomics

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    Following publication of the original article, the authors would like to correct a sentence in the paragraph “1H-NMR spectra were recorded at 298 K…” under the heading “NMR experiments”. The sentence currently reads: “The LED pulse sequence had the form -RD-901-G1- 1801-G1-901-G2-T-901-G1-1801-G1-901-G2-t-901-acquire FID, where RD is a relaxation delay, 901 is a 901 RF pulse, G1 is the pulsed-field gradient that is applied to allow editing, 1801 is a 1801 RF pulse, G2 is a spoil gradient applied to remove unwanted magnetization components. The diffusion delay Δ is the time during which the molecules are allowed to diffuse—this is the period (901-G1-1801-G1- 901-G2-T-); and t is a delay to allow the longitudinal eddy currents caused within the sample to decay (Beckonert et al. 2007).” The sentence should read: “The LED pulse sequence had the form -RD-90°-G1- 180°-G1-90°-G2-T-90°-G1-180°-G1-90°-G2-t-90°-acquire FID, where RD is a relaxation delay, 90° is a 90° RF pulse, G1 is the pulsed-field gradient that is applied to allow editing, 180° is a 180° RF pulse, G2 is a spoil gradient applied to remove unwanted magnetization components. The diffusion delay ? is the time during which the molecules are allowed to diffuse—this is the period (90°-G1-180°-G1-90°-G2 T-); and t is a delay to allow the longitudinal eddy currents caused within the sample to decay (Beckonert et al. 2007).” This has been corrected with this erratum.</p

    Molecular identification in metabolomics using infrared ion spectroscopy

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    Small molecule identification is a continually expanding field of research and represents the core challenge in various areas of (bio)analytical science, including metabolomics. Here, we unequivocally differentiate enantiomeric N-Acetylhexosamines in body fluids using infrared ion spectroscopy, providing orthogonal identification of molecular structure unavailable by standard liquid chromatography/high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry. These results illustrate the potential of infrared ion spectroscopy for the identification of small molecules from complex mixtures

    A liquid chromatography mass spectrometry method for the measurement of cystathionine beta-synthase activity in cell extracts

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    Item does not contain fulltextBackground: In order to correctly assess the efficacy of therapy or diet in intervention studies on the activity of cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) a sensitive analytical method is necessary. Methods: An electrospray LC-MS/MS method preceded by a solid phase extraction step was developed for the measurement of CBS activity in cell extracts. Nonafluoropentanoic acid was used as an ionpair to provide the underivatized cystathionine the desired retention on a C18 column. Results: A detection limit of 50pmol cystathionine/h/mg protein was achieved. In fibroblasts, intra- and inter-assay CVs for the CBS activity were 5.2% and 14.7%, respectively. A K(m) value of 8mumol/L for homocysteine, and 2.5mumol/L for serine was calculated. In fibroblasts wildtype, heterozygous, and homozygous CBS activity ranges measured were 8.5-27.0, 4.2-13.4, 0.0-0.7nmol/hxmg protein, respectively. The method was applied to a study where rats were fed 2 diets. Increase of dietary methionine (7.7 versus 3.8mg/kg methionine) significantly increased the CBS activity in rat liver lysates from a median of 58.0 to a median of 71.5 (P=0.037)nmol/hxmg protein. In a lymphoblasts cell culture experiment, the addition of Hcy to the culture media increased the activity of CBS 3 fold. Conclusion: This LC-MS/MS is able to diagnose CBS deficiency at the enzyme level, and can accurately measure the effect diets or therapy might have on the CBS activity in a variety of cell types

    Abnormal VLCADD newborn screening resembling MADD in four neonates with decreased riboflavin levels and VLCAD activity

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    Early detection of congenital disorders by newborn screening (NBS) programs is essential to prevent or limit disease manifestation in affected neonates. These programs balance between the detection of the highest number of true cases and the lowest number of false-positives. In this case report, we describe four unrelated cases with a false-positive NBS result for very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (VLCADD). Three neonates presented with decreased but not deficient VLCAD enzyme activity and two of them carried a single heterozygous ACADVL c.1844G>A mutation. Initial biochemical investigations after positive NBS referral in these infants revealed acylcarnitine and organic acid profiles resembling those seen in multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD). Genetic analysis did not reveal any pathogenic mutations in the genes encoding the electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF alpha and beta subunits) nor in ETF dehydrogenase. Subsequent further diagnostics revealed decreased levels of riboflavin in the newborns and oral riboflavin administration normalized the MADD-like biochemical profiles. During pregnancy, the mothers followed a vegan, vegetarian or lactose-free diet which probably caused alimentary riboflavin deficiency in the neonates. This report demonstrates that a secondary (alimentary) maternal riboflavin deficiency in combination with reduced VLCAD activity in the newborns can result in an abnormal VLCADD/MADD acylcarnitine profile and can cause false-positive NBS. We hypothesize that maternal riboflavin deficiency contributed to the false-positive VLCADD neonatal screening results
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