Nutrients (Oct 2019)

Nutritional and Metabolic Characteristics of UK Adult Phenylketonuria Patients with Varying Dietary Adherence

  • Benjamin Green,
  • Robert Browne,
  • Sarah Firman,
  • Melanie Hill,
  • Yusof Rahman,
  • Kit Kaalund Hansen,
  • Sarah Adam,
  • Rachel Skeath,
  • Paula Hallam,
  • Ide Herlihy,
  • Fiona Jenkinson,
  • Claire Nicol,
  • Sandra Adams,
  • Lisa Gaff,
  • Sarah Donald,
  • Charlotte Dawson,
  • Louise Robertson,
  • Carla Fitzachary,
  • Heidi Chan,
  • Arlene Slabbert,
  • Carolyn Dunlop,
  • Alison Cozens,
  • Camille Newby,
  • Victoria Bittle,
  • Gary Hubbard,
  • Rebecca Stratton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11102459
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 2459

Abstract

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The nutritional and metabolic characteristics of adult phenylketonuria (PKU) patients in the UK with varying dietary adherence is unknown. In other countries, nutritional and metabolic abnormalities have been reported in nonadherent patients compared to adherent counterparts. A pooled analysis of primary baseline data from two UK multi-centre studies was therefore performed to establish whether this is true from a UK perspective. Adult PKU patients who had provided 3-day food records and amino acid blood samples were included and grouped according to dietary adherence (adherent; n = 16 vs. nonadherent; n = 14). Nonadherent patients consumed greater amounts of natural protein compared to adherent patients (61.6 ± 30.7 vs. 18.3 ± 7.7 g/day; q < 0.001). In contrast, the contribution of protein substitutes to total protein intake was lower in nonadherent compared to adherent patients (3.9 ± 9.2 g/day vs. 58.6 ± 10.2 g/day; q < 0.001). Intakes of iron, zinc, vitamin D3, magnesium, calcium, selenium, iodine, vitamin C, vitamin A and copper were significantly lower in nonadherent compared to adherent patients and were below UK Reference Nutrient Intakes. Similarly, intakes of thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin B6 and phosphorus were significantly lower in nonadherent compared to adherent patients but met the UK Reference Nutrient Intakes. Phenylalanine concentrations in nonadherent patients were significantly higher than adherent patients (861 ± 348 vs. 464 ± 196 µmol/L; q = 0.040) and fell outside of European treatment target ranges. This study shows the nutritional and metabolic consequences of deviation from phenylalanine restriction and intake of PKU protein substitutes in nonadherent adult PKU patients. Collectively, these data further underlie the importance of life-long adherence to the PKU diet.

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