4.4 Article

Neuromuscular conditions and the impact of cystine-depleting therapy in infantile nephropathic cystinosis: A cross-sectional analysis of 55 patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF INHERITED METABOLIC DISEASE
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 183-191

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jimd.12464

Keywords

distal myopathy; Esslinger Fitness Index; infantile nephropathic cystinosis; median nerve; neuromuscular complications

Funding

  1. Cystinosis Foundation
  2. Projekt DEAL

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This study investigated neuromuscular complications in patients with infantile nephropathic cystinosis and found that physical performance was below average in all patients. Some patients had mild weakness in neck flexors and abdominal rectus muscles, while severe weakness and specific neuromuscular conditions were not directly related to cystinosis. Muscle ultrasound, electromyography, and cysteine levels were important factors in the study results.
Infantile nephropathic cystinosis (INC) is a rare lysosomal storage disease caused by biallelic mutations in the cystinosin gene, leading to cystine accumulation in various organs. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to investigate neuromuscular complications in a cohort of 55 patients (aged 2.8-41.3 years, median 18.5 years) with INC. Clinical examination, jumping mechanography, clinical neurophysiology, and muscle/nerve ultrasound were performed. Physical performance, measured by mechanography, was below average in all patients. However, this reduction in physical performance was not always detected by conventional muscle power assessment. Twenty-eight percent of patients had mostly mild axial weakness of the neck flexors and/or of the abdominal rectus muscles, the latter often presenting during childhood. One adult patient had generalized muscle weakness. Two patients had evidence of specific neuromuscular conditions, which may not have been directly related to cystinosis. 30% of patients presented with mild, 7% with moderate, and 5% with severe weakness of the intrinsic muscles of the hand. Muscle wasting was more pronounced in the older cystinosis patients with multiple organ complications. Sonographic increase in muscle echogenicity corresponded only with severe weakness. Electromyography of the intrinsic hand muscles, performed in selected patients, showed myopathic, neurogenic, or mixed myopathic-neurogenic abnormalities. A particularly important finding of this study is that the neuromuscular complications were largely independent from both the age of initiation of pharmacological cystine-depleting therapy and from adherence to treatment. Significant correlation was observed between better physical performance in jumping and cysteine levels in leukocytes.

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