Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/120556
Título: A three-year longitudinal study comparing bone mass, density, and geometry measured by dxa, pqct, and bone turnover markers in children with pku taking l-amino acid or glycomacropeptide protein substitutes
Autor: Daly, Anne
Högler, Wolfgang
Crabtree, Nicola
Shaw, Nick
Evans, Sharon
Pinto, Alex
Jackson, Richard
Ashmore, Catherine
Rocha, Júlio C.
Strauss, Boyd J.
Wilcox, Gisela
Fraser, William D.
Tang, Jonathan C.Y.
Macdonald, Anita
Palavras-chave: Amino acid protein substitute
Blood biochemistry
Bone mineral density
Bone turnover markers
Casein glycomacropeptide
Osteoporosis
PKU
Food Science
Nutrition and Dietetics
Data: Jun-2021
Resumo: In patients with phenylketonuria (PKU), treated by diet therapy only, evidence suggests that areal bone mineral density (BMDa) is within the normal clinical reference range but is below the population norm. Aims: To study longitudinal bone density, mass, and geometry over 36 months in children with PKU taking either amino acid (L-AA) or casein glycomacropeptide substitutes (CGMP-AA) as their main protein source. Methodology: A total of 48 subjects completed the study, 19 subjects in the L-AA group (median age 11.1, range 5–6 years) and 29 subjects in the CGMP-AA group (median age 8.3, range 5–16years). The CGMP-AA was further divided into two groups, CGMP100 (median age 9.2, range 5–16years) (n = 13), children taking CGMP-AA only and CGMP50 (median age 7.3, range 5–15years) (n = 16), children taking a combination of CGMP-AA and L-AA. Dual X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) was measured at enrolment and 36 months, peripheral quantitative computer tomography (pQCT) at 36 months only, and serum blood and urine bone turnover markers (BTM) and blood bone biochemistry at enrolment, 6, 12, and 36 months. Results: No statistically significant differences were found between the three groups for DXA outcome parameters, i.e., BMDa (L2–L4 BMDa g/cm2 ), bone mineral apparent density (L2–L4 BMAD g/cm3 ) and total body less head BMDa (TBLH g/cm2 ). All blood biochemistry markers were within the reference ranges, and BTM showed active bone turnover with a trend for BTM to decrease with increasing age. Conclusions: Bone density was clinically normal, although the median z scores were below the population mean. BTM showed active bone turnover and blood biochemistry was within the reference ranges. There appeared to be no advantage to bone density, mass, or geometry from taking a macropeptide-based protein substitute as compared with L-AAs.
Descrição: Funding Information: Funding: This research was funded by Vitaflo International as part of Ph.D. grant. Funding Information: Conflicts of Interest: A.D. research funding from Vitaflo International, financial support from Nutri-cia, Mevalia & Vitaflo International to attend study days & conferences. S.E. research funding from Nutricia, financial support from Nutricia & Vitaflo International to attend study days & conferences. A.P. has received an educational grant from Cambrooke Therapeutics and grants from Vitaflo International, Nutricia, Merck Serono, Biomarin and Mevalia to attend scientific meetings. C.A. received honoraria from Nutricia and Vitaflo International to attend study days and conferences. J.C.R. member of the European Nutritionist Expert Panel (Biomarin), the Advisory Board for Applied Pharma Research and Nutricia, and received honoraria as a speaker from APR, Merck Serono, Biomarin, Nutricia, Vitaflo, Cambrooke, PIAM and Lifediet. A.M. research funding & honoraria from Nutricia, Vitaflo International & Merck Serono, Member of European Nutrition Expert Panel (Merck Serono international), member of Sapropterin Advisory Board (Merck Serono international), member of the Advisory Board Element (Danone-Nutricia). The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Copyright: Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/120556
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13062075
ISSN: 1422-8599
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