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Morphological changes in muscle tissue of patients with infantile Pompe's disease receiving enzyme replacement therapy

✍ Scribed by Léon P. F. Winkel; Joep H. J. Kamphoven; Hannerieke J. M. P. Van Den Hout; Lies A. Severijnen; Pieter A. Van Doorn; Arnold J. J. Reuser; Ans T. Van Der Ploeg


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
621 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Pompe's disease (glycogen storage disease type II) is an autosomal recessive myopathy caused by lysosomal α‐glucosidase deficiency. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) is currently under development for this disease. We evaluated the morphological changes in muscle tissue of four children with infantile Pompe's disease who received recombinant human α‐glucosidase from rabbit milk for 72 weeks. The patients were 2.5–8 months of age at entry. Prior to treatment, all patients showed lysosomal glycogen storage in skeletal and smooth muscle cells, vascular endothelium, Schwann cells, and perineurium. The first response to treatment was noticed in vascular endothelium and in peripheral nerves after 12 weeks of treatment at an enzyme dose of 15–20 mg/kg. Increasing the dose to 40 mg/kg led, after 72 weeks of treatment, to a reduction of glycogen storage and substantial improvement of muscle architecture in the least affected patient. Not all patients responded equally well, possibly due to differences in degree of glycogen storage and concomitant muscle pathology at the start of treatment. We conclude that intravenous administration of recombinant human α‐glucosidase from rabbit milk can improve muscle morphology in classic infantile Pompe's disease when treatment is started before irreversible damage has occurred. Muscle Nerve 27: 743–751, 2003


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## Abstract Pompe disease is a rare, progressive disease leading to skeletal muscle weakness due to deficiency of the acid α‐glucosidase (GAA) enzyme. Herein we report the first diagnosed Finnish patient with a phenotype compatible with the late‐onset form of Pompe disease. Molecular genetic analys