Login / Signup

Rapid and long-lasting efficacy of high-dose ambroxol therapy for neuronopathic Gaucher disease: A case report and literature review.

Kanako HigashiYuri SonodaNoriyuki KakuFumihiko FujiiFumiya YamashitaSooyoung LeeVlad TocanGo EbiharaWakato MatsuokaKenichi TetsuharaMotoshi SonodaPin Fee ChongYuichi MushimotoKanako Kojima-IshiiMasataka IshimuraYuhki KogaAtsuhisa FukutaNana Akagi TsuchihashiYoshikazu KikuchiTakahito KarashimaTakaaki SawadaTaeko HottaMakoto YoshimitsuHideyuki TerazonoTatsuro TajiriTakashi NakagawaYasunari SakaiKimitoshi NakamuraShouichi Ohga
Published in: Molecular genetics & genomic medicine (2024)
Gaucher disease (GD) is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by a deficiency in the GBA1-encoded enzyme, β-glucocerebrosidase. Enzyme replacement therapy is ineffective for neuronopathic Gaucher disease (nGD). High-dose ambroxol has been administered as an alternative treatment for a group of patients with nGD. However, little is known about the clinical indication and the long-term outcome of patients after ambroxol therapy. We herein report a case of a female patient who presented with a progressive disease of GD type 2 from 11 months of age and had the pathogenic variants of p.L483P (formerly defined as p.L444P) and p.R502H (p.R463H) in GBA1. A combined treatment of imiglucerase with ambroxol started improving the patient's motor activity in 1 week, while it kept the long-lasting effect of preventing the deteriorating phenotype for 30 months. A literature review identified 40 patients with nGD, who had received high-dose ambroxol therapy. More than 65% of these patients favorably responded to the molecular chaperone therapy, irrespective of p.L483P homozygous, heterozygous or the other genotypes. These results highlight the long-lasting effect of ambroxol-based chaperone therapy for patients with an expanding spectrum of mutations in GBA1.
Keyphrases