Screening certain infants can be lifesaving, Wake Forest study
shows
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Investigators at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical
Center have demonstrated for the first time that screening newborn infants for a
particular genetic defect can be lifesaving when their mothers develop a rare
complication of pregnancy. "It allowed early diagnosis and dietary treatment in
affected infants before symptoms appeared," said Jamal A. Ibdah, M.D., Ph.D.,
the principal investigator, writing in the Nov. 6 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
In a study of 108 women who developed liver problems unique to pregnancy, 27
fit a diagnosis of what is called acute fatty liver of pregnancy. The
investigators detected a mutation in infants born to five families, or 19
percent, of the women with acute fatty liver. "I want the public to know that
although this is a rare disorder, the treatment of it is simple and can prevent
a death," said Ibdah, associate professor of internal medicine
(gastroenterology). "Saving the life of one baby is enough."
The fetus's genetic defect -- which occurs about once in 40,000 babies --
blocks the body's use of most fatty acids, the key component in most fat. Fatty
acids are ordinarily used to supply energy and for other essential functions.
But in these pregnancies, unused fatty acids spill over through the placenta
into the mother's bloodstream and have a toxic effect on the mother's liver,
said Ibdah. (Acute fatty liver of pregnancy also has other causes.) It is the
newborns of these mothers that need to be screened, Ibdah said. "The best time
for screening is at birth since the babies manifest the disease at a few months
of age."
"The association between acute fatty liver of pregnancy and the mutation is
significant," the researchers said. "It is critically important that
pediatricians, perinatologists, obstetricians and gastroenterologists be
informed of this association."
Screening the babies "allows early diagnosis and treatment in the newborn and
genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis in subsequent pregnancies in affected
families." The prenatal diagnosis may show that the baby is completely free of
the mutation, or that they have only one copy of the defective gene from either
the mother or the father. These babies will not develop the disorder. It is only
when the baby has defective genes from both the mother and the father that the
disease develops in the mother during pregnancy and in the baby a few months
after birth.
Once diagnosed, these babies are placed on special diets that reduce the
amount of fat and change the type of fat, which counteracts the effect of the
gene mutation. For instance, these babies can metabolize coconut oil, Ibdah
said. These babies also need to avoid fasting.
Ibdah had reported in the New England Journal of Medicine in June 1999 that
he and his colleagues had identified the genetic defect in 24 infants or
toddlers who had come in with liver, heart or muscular abnormalities that
suggested their bodies were not using fatty acids properly. Seven infants died
almost immediately and another one about 18 months later. The remaining babies
were given the special diet in formulas; older children follow similar diets.
They documented long-term survival of the children on the special diet. Now,
said Ibdah, they are reporting that moving in quickly by screening infants born
to mothers with acute fatty liver of pregnancy before symptoms develop can be
lifesaving -- though children with this defect will need to remain on special
diets. The 108 women in the study were referred from 27 states.
###
Besides Ibdah, the research team includes Zi Yang, M.D., Jennifer Yamade,
M.D. and Yiwen Zhao, all of Wake Forest and Arnold W. Strauss M.D. from the
Department of Pediatrics at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in
Nashville.
Contact: Robert Conn (rconn@wfubmc.edu),
Karen Richardson (krchrdsn@wfubmc.edu),
or Barbara Hahn (bhahn@wfubmc.edu) at
336-716-4587 For an electronic copy of this release by email, please call the
contact number above.
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