Substrate reduction therapy of glycosphingolipid storage disorders
- 1 April 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
- Vol. 29 (2-3) , 449-456
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-006-0272-5
Abstract
Summary: In the last 15 years enormous progress has been made regarding therapy of type I Gaucher disease, a severely disabling disorder characterized by intralysosomal storage of glucosylceramide in tissue macrophages. Effective enzyme replacement therapy of type I Gaucher disease, based on chronic intravenous administration of mannose‐terminated recombinant human glucocerebrosidase, has been available since 1990 and has been applied in several thousand patients without serious adverse effects. An alternative therapeutic approach, so‐called substrate reduction therapy, is based on partial reduction of the synthesis of glucosylceramide and hence of subsequent metabolites. Oral administration of an inhibitor of glucosylceramide synthesis (N‐butyldeoxynojirimycin, registered in Europe since 2002 as miglustat (Zavesca)), is effective in reversing clinical symptoms in type I Gaucher patients with mild to moderate disease manifestations. The growing long‐term experience with substrate reduction therapy indicates that this treatment is also without major adverse effects. Substrate reduction therapy, in conjunction with enzyme replacement therapy, may play an important role in the future clinical management of patients suffering from type I Gaucher disease. Clinical trials are under way that should reveal the value of substrate reduction for maintenance therapy of type I Gaucher disease and for treatment of neuronopathic variants of Gaucher disease, Niemann–Pick disease type C, late‐onset Tay–Sachs disease and Sandhoff disease.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Storage solutions: treating lysosomal disorders of the brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2005
- Marked elevation of the chemokine CCL18/PARC in Gaucher disease: a novel surrogate marker for assessing therapeutic interventionBlood, 2004
- Evaluation of three biochemical markers in the monitoring of Gaucher diseaseJournal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, 2003
- Dixon Quantitative Chemical Shift Imaging Is a Sensitive Tool for the Evaluation of Bone Marrow Responses to Individualized Doses of Enzyme Supplementation Therapy in Type 1 Gaucher DiseaseBlood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases, 2001
- TEN YEARS' EXPERIENCE OF BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION FOR GAUCHER DISEASETransplantation, 1995
- Marked elevation of plasma chitotriosidase activity. A novel hallmark of Gaucher disease.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- Role of pH in determining the cell-type-specific residual activity of glucocerebrosidase in type 1 Gaucher disease.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1993
- Replacement Therapy for Inherited Enzyme Deficiency — Macrophage-Targeted Glucocerebrosidase for Gaucher's DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Function of oligosaccharide modification in glucocerebrosidase, a membrane‐associated lysosomal hydrolaseEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1990
- Neuropathology of the Norrbottnian type of Gaucher diseaseActa Neuropathologica, 1984