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a School of Human
Development, University of Nottingham, UK, b Dietetic Department, The Birmingham Children's
Hospital, UK, c Institute of
Child Health, St Michael's Hill, Bristol, UK, d Department
of Molecular Genetics, The Lewis Laboratories, Southmead Hospital,
Bristol, UK
Correspondence to: Prof N Marlow, Academic Division of Child Health, E Floor, East Block University Hospital, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH, UK email: neil.marlow{at}nottingham.ac.uk
Accepted 30 March 2000
AIMS
To evaluate the cognitive
outcome of a cohort of children with galactosaemia in relation to genotype.
METHODS
The cohort was drawn from
children notified to the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit
galactosaemia study which ran from 1988 to 1990. Cognitive outcome was
assessed using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children or the
Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence. Parents completed
a questionnaire detailing educational status, and the attending
paediatrician returned a questionnaire regarding age at diagnosis and
biochemical outcome over the previous two years.
RESULTS
A total of 45 children were
genotyped: 30 were homoallelic for the Q188R mutation, the remainder
being heteroallelic for Q188R with K285N (n = 4), L195P (n = 4), or
other mutations (n = 7). Psychometric evaluation was available in 34 cases: mean full scale IQ was 79, verbal quotient 79, and performance
quotient 82. Genotype was not related to galactose-1-phosphate
(Gal-1-P) concentrations. However, children homoallelic for the Q188R
mutation had significantly lower IQ scores than those who were
heteroallelic (73.6 v 94.8). This difference
was independent of social and demographic influences and Gal-1-P
concentrations over the previous two years.
CONCLUSIONS
In children with
galactosaemia, cognitive outcome appears to relate to genotype rather
than metabolic control, as reflected by Gal-1-P concentrations. The
value of measuring Gal-1-P concentrations routinely once successfully
established on a galactosaemia diet is questionable as concentrations
do not appear to affect outcome. In the UK population, homozygosity for
the Q188R mutation is invariably associated with a poor outcome, and
there is evidence that variability in neurocognitive outcome is at
least part dependent on allelic heterogeneity.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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K. Riehman, C. Crews, and J. L. Fridovich-Keil Relationship between Genotype, Activity, and Galactose Sensitivity in Yeast Expressing Patient Alleles of Human Galactose-1-phosphate Uridylyltransferase J. Biol. Chem., March 30, 2001; 276(14): 10634 - 10640. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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