Lysosomal glycogen storage disease with normal acid maltase activity, formerly GSD-IIb, GSD due to LAMP-2 deficiency
Danon disease (or glycogen storage disease Type IIb) is a metabolic disorder.[1] Danon disease is an X-linked lysosomal and glycogen storage disorder associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, skeletal muscle weakness, and intellectual disability.[2] It is inherited in an X-linked dominant pattern.[1]
Contents
1Symptoms and signs
2Causes
3Genetics
4Diagnosis
5Treatment
6History
7See also
8References
9External links
10External links
Symptoms and signs
Males
In males the symptoms of Danon disease are more severe. Features of Danon disease in males are:[citation needed]
An early age of onset of muscle weakness and heart disease (onset in childhood or adolescence)
Some learning problems or intellectual disability can be present
Muscle weakness can be severe and can affect endurance and the ability to walk
Heart disease (cardiomyopathy) can be severe and can lead to a need for medications. It usually progresses to heart failure, commonly complicated by atrial fibrillation and embolic strokes with severe neurological disability,[3] leading to death unless heart transplant is performed.
Cardiac conduction abnormalities can occur. Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome is a common conduction pattern in Danon disease.
Symptoms are usually gradually progressive
Some individuals may have visual disturbances, and/or retinal pigment abnormalities
Danon Disease is rare and unfamiliar to most physicians. It can be mistaken for other forms of heart disease and/or muscular dystrophies, including Pompe disease.
Females
In females the symptoms of Danon disease are less severe. Common symptoms of Danon disease in females are:[citation needed]
A later age of onset of symptoms. Many females will not have obvious symptoms until late adolescence or even adulthood.
Learning problems and intellectual disability are usually absent.
Muscle weakness is often absent or subtle. Some females will tire easily with exercise
Cardiomyopathy is often absent in childhood. Some women will develop this in adulthood. Cardiomyopathy can be associated with atrial fibrillation and embolic strokes.
Cardiac conduction abnormalities can occur. Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome is a common conduction pattern in Danon disease.
Symptoms in females progress more slowly than in males.
Some females may have visual disturbances, and/or retinal pigment abnormalities
Danon Disease is rare and unfamiliar to most physicians. The milder and more subtle symptoms in females can make it more difficult to diagnose females with Danon Disease
Causes
Although the genetic cause of Danon disease is known, the mechanism of disease is not well understood. Danon disease involves a genetic defect (mutation) in a gene called LAMP2, which results in a change to the normal protein structure. While the function of the LAMP2 gene is not well understood, it is known that LAMP2 protein is primarily located in small structures within cells called lysosomes.[citation needed]
Genetics
It is associated with LAMP2.[4] The status of this condition as a GSD has been disputed.[5]
Diagnosis
Making a diagnosis for a genetic or rare disease can often be challenging. Healthcare professionals typically look at a person's medical history, symptoms, physical exam, and laboratory test results in order to make a diagnosis. The following resources provide information relating to diagnosis and testing for this condition. If you have questions about getting a diagnosis, you should contact a healthcare professional.
Testing Resources
The Genetic Testing Registry (GTR) provides information about the genetic tests for this condition. The intended audience for the GTR is health care providers and researchers. Patients and consumers with specific questions about a genetic test should contact a health care provider or a genetics professional.
Orphanet lists international laboratories offering diagnostic testing for this condition.
Treatment
RP-A501 is an AAV-based gene therapy aimed to restore the LAMP-2 gene which is defective in male patients with Danon Disease and how to cure it.[6] Cardiac transplantation has been performed as a treatment; however, most patients die early in life.[7]
History
Danon disease was characterized by Moris Danon in 1981.[8] Dr. Danon first described the disease in 2 boys with heart and skeletal muscle disease (muscle weakness), and intellectual disability.
The first case of Danon disease reported in the Middle East was a family diagnosed in the eastern region of United Arab Emirates with a new LAMP2 mutation; discovered by the Egyptian cardiologist Dr. Mahmoud Ramadan[9] the associate professor of Cardiology in Mansoura University[10] (Egypt) after doing genetic analysis for all the family members in Bergamo, Italy, where 6 males were diagnosed as Danon disease patients and 5 female were diagnosed as carriers; as published in Al-Bayan newspaper on 20 February 2016[11] making this family the largest one with patients and carriers of Danon disease.
Danon disease has overlapping symptoms with another rare genetic condition called 'Pompe' disease. Microscopically, muscles from Danon disease patients appear similar to muscles from Pompe disease patients. However, intellectual disability is rarely, if ever, a symptom of Pompe disease. Negative enzymatic or molecular genetic testing for Pompe disease can help rule out this disorder as a differential diagnosis.[citation needed]
↑"Clinical Outcome and Phenotypic Expression in LAMP2 Cardiomyopathy". JAMA301 (12): 1253–1259. March 2009. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.371. PMID 19318653.
↑Spinazzi M, Fanin M, Melacini P, Nascimbeni AC, Angelini C. "Cardioembolic stroke in Danon disease" Clin Genet. 2008;73:388-90.
↑"Morphological, clinical and genetic aspects in a family with a novel LAMP-2 gene mutation (Danon disease)". Neuromuscular Disorders15 (4): 293–8. April 2005. doi:10.1016/j.nmd.2004.12.007. PMID 15792868.
↑"A Clinical Study Evaluating a Recombinant Adeno-Associated Virus Serotype 9 (RAAV9) Capsid Containing the Human Lysosome-Associated Membrane Protein 2 Isoform B (LAMP2B) Transgene (RP-A501; AAV9.LAMP2B) in Male Patients with DD". Clinical Trials. 24 August 2021. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03882437.
↑Bejar, David; Colombo, Paolo C; Latif, Farhana; Yuzefpolskaya, Melana (8 July 2015). "Infiltrative Cardiomyopathies". Clinical Medicine Insights. Cardiology9 (Suppl 2): 29–38. doi:10.4137/CMC.S19706. ISSN 1179-5468. PMID 26244036.
↑"Lysosomal glycogen storage disease with normal acid maltase". Neurology31 (1): 51–7. January 1981. doi:10.1212/wnl.31.1.51. PMID 6450334.
↑الفجيرة - ابتسام الشاعر (2016-02-19). ""دانون" مرض نادر يصيب القلب بالتضخم". البيان. http://www.albayan.ae/across-the-uae/news-and-reports/2016-02-20-1.2577082.
External links
AGSD - Association of Glycogen Storage Disease in the United States
AGSD-UK - Association of Glycogen Storage Disease in the UK
IamGSD - International Association for Muscle Glycogen Storage Disease
External links
Classification
D
ICD-10: E74.0
OMIM: 300257
MeSH: D052120
External resources
Orphanet: 34587
v
t
e
Inborn error of carbohydrate metabolism: monosaccharide metabolism disorders (E73–E74, 271) Including glycogen storage diseases (GSD)
Sucrose, transport (extracellular)
Disaccharide catabolism
Congenital alactasia
Sucrose intolerance
Monosaccharide transport
Glucose-galactose malabsorption
Inborn errors of renal tubular transport (Renal glycosuria)
Fructose malabsorption
Hexose → glucose
Monosaccharide catabolism
Fructose:
Essential fructosuria
Fructose intolerance
Galactose / galactosemia:
GALK deficiency
GALT deficiency/GALE deficiency
Glucose ⇄ glycogen]]
Glycogenesis
GSD type 0 (glycogen synthase deficiency)
GSD type IV (Andersen's disease, branching enzyme deficiency)
Adult polyglucosan body disease (APBD)
Glycogenolysis
Extralysosomal:
GSD type III (Cori's disease, debranching enzyme deficiency)
GSD type VI (Hers' disease, liver glycogen phosphorylase deficiency)
GSD type V (McArdle's disease, myophosphorylase deficiency)
GSD type IX (phosphorylase kinase deficiency)
Lysosomal (LSD):
GSD type II (Pompe's disease, glucosidase deficiency)
Glucose ⇄ CAC]]
Glycolysis
MODY 2/HHF3
GSD type VII (Tarui's disease, phosphofructokinase deficiency)
Triosephosphate isomerase deficiency
Pyruvate kinase deficiency
Gluconeogenesis
PCD
Fructose bisphosphatase deficiency
GSD type I (von Gierke's disease, glucose 6-phosphatase deficiency)
Pentose phosphate pathway
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
Transaldolase deficiency
6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase deficiency
Other
Hyperoxaluria
Primary hyperoxaluria
Pentosuria
Aldolase A deficiency
v
t
e
Sex linkage: X-linked disorders
X-linked recessive
Immune
Chronic granulomatous disease (CYBB)
Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome
X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency
X-linked agammaglobulinemia
Hyper-IgM syndrome type 1
IPEX
X-linked lymphoproliferative disease
Properdin deficiency
Hematologic
Haemophilia A
Haemophilia B
X-linked sideroblastic anemia
Endocrine
Androgen insensitivity syndrome/Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy