Combination of triheptanoin with the ketogenic diet in Glucose transporter type 1 deficiency (G1D)

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作者
Adrian Avila
Ignacio Málaga
Deepa Sirsi
Saima Kayani
Sharon Primeaux
Gauri A. Kathote
Vikram Jakkamsetti
Raja Reddy Kallem
William C. Putnam
Jason Y. Park
Shlomo Shinnar
Juan M. Pascual
机构
[1] The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,Rare Brain Disorders Program
[2] The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,Department of Neurology
[3] The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,Department of Pediatrics
[4] Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center,Department of Pharmacy Practice and Clinical Pharmacology, Experimental Therapeutics Center
[5] Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center,Department of Pharmaceutical Science
[6] The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,Department of Pathology
[7] Albert Einstein College of Medicine,Departments of Neurology and Pediatrics
[8] The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,Department of Physiology
[9] The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth & Development/Center for Human Genetics
来源
Scientific Reports | / 13卷
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摘要
Fuel influx and metabolism replenish carbon lost during normal neural activity. Ketogenic diets studied in epilepsy, dementia and other disorders do not sustain such replenishment because their ketone body derivatives contain four carbon atoms and are thus devoid of this anaplerotic or net carbon donor capacity. Yet, in these diseases carbon depletion is often inferred from cerebral fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography. Further, ketogenic diets may prove incompletely therapeutic. These deficiencies provide the motivation for complementation with anaplerotic fuel. However, there are few anaplerotic precursors consumable in clinically sufficient quantities besides those that supply glucose. Five-carbon ketones, stemming from metabolism of the food supplement triheptanoin, are anaplerotic. Triheptanoin can favorably affect Glucose transporter type 1 deficiency (G1D), a carbon-deficiency encephalopathy. However, the triheptanoin constituent heptanoate can compete with ketogenic diet-derived octanoate for metabolism in animals. It can also fuel neoglucogenesis, thus preempting ketosis. These uncertainties can be further accentuated by individual variability in ketogenesis. Therefore, human investigation is essential. Consequently, we examined the compatibility of triheptanoin at maximum tolerable dose with the ketogenic diet in 10 G1D individuals using clinical and electroencephalographic analyses, glycemia, and four- and five-carbon ketosis. 4 of 8 of subjects with pre-triheptanoin beta-hydroxybutyrate levels greater than 2 mM demonstrated a significant reduction in ketosis after triheptanoin. Changes in this and the other measures allowed us to deem the two treatments compatible in the same number of individuals, or 50% of persons in significant beta-hydroxybutyrate ketosis. These results inform the development of individualized anaplerotic modifications to the ketogenic diet.
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