Nephropathic cystinosis is an autosomal recessive metabolic, lifelong disease characterized by lysosomal cystine accumulation throughout the body that commonly presents in infancy with a renal Fanconi syndrome and, if untreated, leads to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) in the later childhood years. The molecular basis is due to mutations in CTNS, the gene encoding for the lysosomal cystine-proton cotransporter, cystinosin. During adolescence and adulthood, extrarenal manifestations of cystinosis develop and require multidisciplinary care. Despite substantial improvement in prognosis due to cystine-depleting therapy with cysteamine, no cure of the disease is currently available. Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) convened a Controversies Conference on cystinosis to review the state-of-the-art knowledge and to address areas of controversies in pathophysiology, diagnostics, monitoring, and treatment in different age groups. More importantly, promising areas of investigation that may lead to optimal outcomes for patients afflicted with this lifelong, systemic disease were discussed with a research agenda proposed for the future.
Our sample of Mexican patients display allelic heterogeneity as compared to European or North American cystinosis cases. The identification of novel mutations might suggest the presence of exclusive American CTNS alleles in Mexican population. In order to prevent the false positive assignation of 57-kb deletion genotype, as caused by the presence of another type of intragenic CTNS gross deletion, we propose to analyze a different control CTNS exon to those originally reported in both LDM multiplex PCR assays, especially when parental DNA samples are not available.
Hepatorenal tyrosinemia is a treatable metabolic disease characterized by progressive liver failure, renal damage and pronounced coagulopathy. Its clinical diagnosis is difficult because of its low prevalence and heterogeneous symptoms. In developed countries, expanded newborn screening, based on succinylacetone quantification by tandem mass spectrometry, has been very valuable in the early detection of hepatorenal tyrosinemia, providing the opportunity for rapid treatment of affected patients. In developing countries without systematic expanded newborn screening, however, diagnosis and treatment of this disease remain major challenges, as genetic diseases in these countries are not a health priority and there are few referral centers for infants with inherited errors of metabolism. This chapter describes the diagnosis, follow-up and outcome of 20 Mexican patients with hepatorenal tyrosinemia. This chapter also constitutes a call to action to pediatricians, gastroenterologists, geneticists and other health professionals, and to academic organizations, health authorities and patient advocacy groups, to promote early patient detection and treatment, reducing the unacceptably high mortality rate (75%) in Mexican infants with this potentially deadly but eminently treatable condition.
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