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The critical role of psychosine in screening, diagnosis, and monitoring of Krabbe disease

Authors :
Joanne Kurtzberg
Vinod K. Prasad
Adam J. Guenzel
Coleman T. Turgeon
Joan E. Pellegrino
Gisele Pino
Kimiyo Raymond
Amy L. White
Maria L. Escolar
Rachel Hickey
Devin Oglesbee
Dawn Peck
Piero Rinaldo
Ai Sakonju
Margie A. Ream
Silvia Tortorelli
Joseph J. Orsini
Natalie M. Shallow
April Studinski
Michael H. Gelb
Dimitar Gavrilov
Kim K. Nickander
Maria Laura Duque Lasio
Dietrich Matern
Source :
Genetics in Medicine. 22:1108-1118
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Newborn screening (NBS) for Krabbe disease (KD) is performed by measurement of galactocerebrosidase (GALC) activity as the primary test. This revealed that GALC activity has poor specificity for KD. Psychosine (PSY) was proposed as a disease marker useful to reduce the false positive rate for NBS and for disease monitoring. We report a highly sensitive PSY assay that allows identification of KD patients with minimal PSY elevations. PSY was extracted from dried blood spots or erythrocytes with methanol containing d5-PSY as internal standard, and measured by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. Analysis of PSY in samples from controls (N = 209), GALC pseudodeficiency carriers (N = 55), GALC pathogenic variant carriers (N = 27), patients with infantile KD (N = 26), and patients with late-onset KD (N = 11) allowed for the development of an effective laboratory screening and diagnostic algorithm. Additional longitudinal measurements were used to track therapeutic efficacy of hematopoietic stem cell transplantion (HSCT). This study supports PSY quantitation as a critical component of NBS for KD. It helps to differentiate infantile from later onset KD variants, as well as from GALC variant and pseudodeficiency carriers. Additionally, this study provides further data that PSY measurement can be useful to monitor KD progression before and after treatment.

Details

ISSN :
10983600
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a47210c51ffe5b05fc9c0888ea3c4791
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-020-0764-y