Login / Signup

Adult diagnosis of congenital serine biosynthesis defect: A treatable cause of progressive neuropathy.

Sarah DebsCarlos R FerreiraCatherine GrodenH Jeffrey KimKelly A KingMonique C KingTanya LehkyEdward W CowenLaura H BrownMelissa MeridethCarter M OwenEllen F MacnamaraCamilo ToroWilliam A GahlAriane G Soldatos
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2021)
A woman with ichthyosis, contractures, and progressive neuropathy represents the first case of phosphoserine aminotransferase deficiency diagnosed and treated in an adult. She has novel compound heterozygous mutations in the gene PSAT1. Treatment with high dose oral L-serine completely resolved the ichthyosis. Consideration of this diagnosis is important because early treatment with L-serine repletion can halt progression of neurodegeneration and potentially improve neurological disabilities. As exome sequencing becomes more widely implemented in the diagnostic evaluation of progressive neurodegenerative phenotypes, adult neurologists and geneticists will increasingly encounter later onset manifestations of inborn errors of metabolism classically considered in infancy and early childhood.
Keyphrases
  • multiple sclerosis
  • high dose
  • copy number
  • protein kinase
  • emergency department
  • patient safety
  • early onset
  • physical activity
  • case report
  • young adults
  • brain injury
  • weight loss
  • quality improvement