RMD Open (Oct 2022)

Radiological evolution of spinal disease in alkaptonuria and the effect of nitisinone

  • Lakshminarayan R Ranganath,
  • Milad Khedr,
  • Jean-Baptiste Arnoux,
  • Jozef Rovensky,
  • Richard Jackson,
  • Vanda Mlynarikova,
  • Helen Bygott,
  • Birgitta Olsson,
  • Mattias Rudebeck,
  • Andrea Zatkova,
  • Richard Imrich,
  • Olga Lukacova,
  • Jana Sedlakova,
  • Mária Úlehlová,
  • Matthew Gornall,
  • James Gallagher,
  • Roman Stančík,
  • Eva Vrtíková,
  • Elizabeth Záňová,
  • Emily Luangrath

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/rmdopen-2022-002422
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2

Abstract

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Objectives Ochronotic spondyloarthropathy represents one of the main clinical manifestations of alkaptonuria (AKU); however, prospective data and description of the effect of nitisinone treatment are lacking.Methods Patients with AKU aged 25 years or older were randomly assigned to receive either oral nitisinone 10 mg/day (N=69) or no treatment (N=69). Spine radiographs were recorded yearly at baseline, 12, 24, 36 and 48 months, and the images were scored for the presence of intervertebral space narrowing, soft tissue calcifications, vacuum phenomena, osteophytes/hyperostosis and spinal fusion in the cervical, thoracic and lumbosacral segment at each of the time points.Results At baseline, narrowing of the intervertebral spaces, the presence of osteophytes/hyperostosis and calcifications were the three most frequent radiographic features in AKU. The rate of progression of the five main features during the 4 years, ranked from the highest to lowest was as follows: intervertebral spaces narrowing, calcifications, vacuum phenomena, osteophytes/hyperostosis and fusions. The rate of progression did not differ between the treated and untreated groups in any of the five radiographic parameters except for a slower rate of progression (sum of all five features) in the treatment group compared with the control group (0.45 (1.11) nitisinone vs 0.74 (1.11) controls, p=0.049) in the thoracic segment.Conclusion The present study shows a relatively slow but significant worsening of radiographic features in patients with AKU over 4 years. Our results demonstrate a modest beneficial effect of 10 mg/day of nitisinone on the slowly progressing spondylosis in AKU during the relatively limited follow-up time.Trial registration number NCT01916382.