AI Article Synopsis

  • The guidelines for managing propionic acidemia (PA) recommend standard cardiac therapy for patients with cardiac complications, while recent discussions raise questions about the effectiveness of high doses of coenzyme Q10 on cardiac function.
  • Liver transplantation may stabilize or reverse cardiomyopathy in some patients, highlighting an urgent need for therapies to improve cardiac function for those waiting for or ineligible for transplants.
  • The review discusses the pathogenetic mechanisms behind cardiac complications in PA and analyzes available and potential pharmacological treatments, emphasizing the complexity of these mechanisms and the necessity for therapies that extend beyond merely correcting the enzymatic defect.

Article Abstract

The guidelines for the management of patients affected by propionic acidemia (PA) recommend standard cardiac therapy in the presence of cardiac complications. A recent revision questioned the impact of high doses of coenzyme Q10 on cardiac function in patients with cardiomyopathy (CM). Liver transplantation is a therapeutic option for several patients since it may stabilize or reverse CM. Both the patients waiting for liver transplantation and, even more, the ones not eligible for transplant programs urgently need therapies to improve cardiac function. To this aim, the identification of the pathogenetic mechanisms represents a key point. This review summarizes: (1) the current knowledge of the pathogenetic mechanisms underlying cardiac complications in PA and (2) the available and potential pharmacological options for the prevention or the treatment of cardiac complications in PA. To select articles, we searched the electronic database PubMed using the Mesh terms "propionic acidemia" OR "propionate" AND "cardiomyopathy" OR "Long QT syndrome". We selected 77 studies, enlightening 12 potential disease-specific or non-disease-specific pathogenetic mechanisms, namely: impaired substrate delivery to TCA cycle and TCA dysfunction, secondary mitochondrial electron transport chain dysfunction and oxidative stress, coenzyme Q10 deficiency, metabolic reprogramming, carnitine deficiency, cardiac excitation-contraction coupling alteration, genetics, epigenetics, microRNAs, micronutrients deficiencies, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system activation, and increased sympathetic activation. We provide a critical discussion of the related therapeutic options. Current literature supports the involvement of multiple cellular pathways in cardiac complications of PA, indicating the growing complexity of their pathophysiology. Elucidating the mechanisms responsible for such abnormalities is essential to identify therapeutic strategies going beyond the correction of the enzymatic defect rather than engaging the dysregulated mechanisms. Although these approaches are not expected to be resolutive, they may improve the quality of life and slow the disease progression. Available pharmacological options are limited and tested in small cohorts. Indeed, a multicenter approach is mandatory to strengthen the efficacy of therapeutic options.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10143878PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo13040563DOI Listing

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