Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Sep 2021)

Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Reveals Incipient Cardiomyopathy Traits in Adult Patients With Phenylketonuria

  • Radu Tanacli,
  • Jan‐Hendrik Hassel,
  • Rolf Gebker,
  • Alexander Berger,
  • Michael Gräfe,
  • Christopher Schneeweis,
  • Patrick Doeblin,
  • Eckart Fleck,
  • Christian Stehning,
  • Frank Tacke,
  • Burkert Pieske,
  • Joachim Spranger,
  • Ursula Plöckinger,
  • Athanasia Ziagaki,
  • Sebastian Kelle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.120.020351
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 17

Abstract

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Background Phenylketonuria is the most common inborn error of amino acid metabolism, where oxidative stress and collateral metabolic abnormalities are likely to cause cardiac structural and functional modifications. We aim herein to characterize the cardiac phenotype of adult subjects with phenylketonuria using advanced cardiac imaging. Methods and Results Thirty‐nine adult patients with phenylketonuria (age, 30.5±8.7 years; 10‐year mean phenylalanine concentration, 924±330 µmol/L) and 39 age‐ and sex‐matched healthy controls were investigated. Participants underwent a comprehensive cardiac magnetic resonance and echocardiography examination. Ten‐year mean plasma levels of phenylalanine and tyrosine were used to quantify disease activity and adherence to treatment. Patients with phenylketonuria had thinner left ventricular walls (septal end‐diastolic thickness, 7.0±17 versus 8.8±1.7 mm [P1200 µmol/L (909±48 ms). Both mean phenylalanine (P=0.013) and tyrosine (P=0.035) levels were independently correlated with T1; and in a multiple regression model, higher phenylalanine levels and higher left ventricular mass associate with lower T1. Conclusions Cardiac phenotype of adult patients with phenylketonuria reveals some traits of an early‐stage cardiomyopathy. Regular cardiology follow‐up, tighter therapeutic control, and prophylaxis of cardiovascular risk factors, in particular dyslipidemia, are recommended.

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