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Influence of blood phenylalanine level variations on the development of executive functions and social cognition in children with phenylketonuria

Abstract

Objective:

To investigate the performance of 27 children with phenylketonuria (PKU) in tests of Executive Functions (EF) and Social Cognition (SC), and their associations with metabolic control inferred by phenylalanine (Phe) levels.

Methods:

The PKU group was dichotomized according to baseline Phe-levels into; "classical PKU"(n = 14), with Phe-levels above 1200 µmol/L (> 20 mg/dL); and "mild PKU" (n = 13) with Phe-between 360 and 1200 µmol/L (6-20 mg/dL). The neuropsychological assessment focused on the EF and SC subtests of the NEPSY-II battery and intellectual performance. Children were compared to age-matched healthy participants.

Results:

Participants with PKU presented significantly lower Intellectual Quotient (IQ) compared to controls (p = 0.001). Regarding EF analysis adjusted by age and IQ, significant differences between groups were observed only in the executive attention subtests (p = 0.029). The SC set of variables was significantly different between groups (p = 0.003), as in the affective recognition task (p < 0.001). In the PKU group, the relative variation of Phe-achieved 32.1 ± 21.0%. Relative Phe-variation was correlated only with measures of Working Memory (p < 0.001), Verbal Fluency (p = 0.004), Inhibitory Control (p = 0.035) and Theory of Mind (p = 0.003).

Conclusions:

Phonological Verbal Fluency, Working Memory, Inhibitory Control, and Theory of Mind were shown to be most vulnerable when there is non-ideal metabolic control. Variations in the level of Phe-may have a selective negative effect on Executive Functions and Social Cognition, but not on intellectual performance.

KEYWORDS
Phenylketonuria; Diet therapy; Cognition; Executive functions; Theory of mind

Introduction

Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) gene mutations,11 Blau N, Hennermann JB, Langenbeck U, Lichter-Konecki U. Diagnosis, classification, and genetics of Phenylketonuria and tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) deficiencies. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104:S2-9. causing partial or total deficiency of the PAH enzyme, which converts phenylalanine (Phe) into tyrosine (Tyr). The accumulation of Phe-results in tissue toxicity, especially in the central nervous system.22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200. The clinical phenotypes are usually classified as classical PKU, characterized by plasmatic Phe-levels above 1200 µmol/L defined by tandem mass spectrometry (20 mg/dL by fluorometric immunoassay); and mild PKU, when Phe-levels remain between 360 and 1200 µmol/L (6-20 mg/dL).22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200. According to European guidelines,33 van Wegberg AM, MacDonald A, Ahring K, Bélanger-Quintana A, Blau N, Bosch AM, et al. The complete European guidelines on phenylketonuria: diagnosis and treatment. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2017;12:162. patients with levels above 360 µmol/L (6 mg/dL) should be treated to achieve a therapeutic goal of Phe-between 120 and 360 µmol/L (2-6 mg/dL).11 Blau N, Hennermann JB, Langenbeck U, Lichter-Konecki U. Diagnosis, classification, and genetics of Phenylketonuria and tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) deficiencies. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104:S2-9.,22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200. At the time of this study, the treatment for newborns adopted by Brazilian institutions is recommended only for cases with levels above 10 mg/dL or 600 µmol/L.44 Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria SAS/MS n° 12. Protocolo clínico e diretrizes terapêuticas fenilcetonúria. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde. 2020.

To ensure a better prognosis, children with PKU must be submitted to a low-protein diet to control plasmatic Phe-levels as early as possible.22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200. The time from birth to 12 years of age is a crucial period to maintain stable Phe-levels to preserve neurodevelopment.33 van Wegberg AM, MacDonald A, Ahring K, Bélanger-Quintana A, Blau N, Bosch AM, et al. The complete European guidelines on phenylketonuria: diagnosis and treatment. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2017;12:162. Moreover, diet therapy should be lifelong, since variations in Phe-may result in neurological damage, leading to intellectual deficiency, hyperactivity, and deficits in Executive Functions (EF) and Social Cognition (SC)22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200.,55 Jahja R, van Spronsen FJ, de Sonneville LM, van der Meere JJ, Bosch AM, Hollak CE, et al. Social-cognitive functioning and social skills in patients with early treated Phenylketonuria: a PKU-COBESO study. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2016;39:355-62.. EF skills enable individuals to engage in goal-directed activities and SC is important to regulate behavior through understanding other people's intentions or feelings.66 Wade M, Prime H, Jenkins JM, et al. On the relation between theory of mind and executive functioning: a developmental cognitive neuroscience perspective. Psychon Bull Rev. 2018;25:2119-40. There is evidence that an increase of 100 µmol/L in Phe-level predicts a decrease of 1.3 to 6 points in intelligence quotient (IQ).33 van Wegberg AM, MacDonald A, Ahring K, Bélanger-Quintana A, Blau N, Bosch AM, et al. The complete European guidelines on phenylketonuria: diagnosis and treatment. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2017;12:162.,77 Costello PM, Beasley MG, Tillotson SL, Smith I. Intelligence in mild atypical Phenylketonuria. Eur J Pediatr. 1994;153:260-3. Therefore, dietary adherence is important to provide metabolic stability and guarantee cognitive development.22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200.,33 van Wegberg AM, MacDonald A, Ahring K, Bélanger-Quintana A, Blau N, Bosch AM, et al. The complete European guidelines on phenylketonuria: diagnosis and treatment. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2017;12:162.

Although nutritional treatment has been shown to improve cognitive and behavioral outcomes, neuropsychological dysfunctions have been reported even in individuals submitted to early intervention. The SC and EF domains seem particularly vulnerable to long-term variations of Phe-levels.22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200. Inhibitory control88 Sundermann B, Garde S, Dehghan Nayyeri M, Weglage J, Rau J, Pfleiderer B, et al. Approaching altered inhibitory control in Phenylketonuria: a functional MRI study with a Go-NoGo task in young female adults. Eur J Neurosci. 2020;52:3951-62., working memory99 White DA, Nortz MJ, Mandernach T, Huntington K, Steiner RD. Age-related working memory impairments in children with prefrontal dysfunction associated with phenylketonuria. J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2002;8:1-11., cognitive flexibility1010 Anderson PJ, Wood SJ, Francis DE, Coleman L, Warwick L, Casanelia S, et al. Neuropsychological functioning in children with early-treated Phenylketonuria: impact of white matter abnormalities. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2004;46:230-8. and verbal fluency1111 Hawks ZW, Strube MJ, Johnson NX, Grange DK, White DA. Developmental trajectories of executive and verbal processes in children with phenylketonuria. Dev Neuropsychol. 2018;43: 207-18. impairments are usual and prevail in children with delayed diagnosis without intellectual impairment.1212 van Vliet D, van Wegberg AM, Ahring K, Bik-Multanowski M, Blau N, Bulut FD, et al. Can untreated PKU patients escape from intellectual disability? A systematic review. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2018;13:149. Therefore, the extent of the effects of fluctuations in, and high concentrations of, Phe-on neurodevelopment must be better understood.

This study was designed to analyze the effects of individual variability in Phe-levels on cognitive outcomes in Brazilian PKU children. The authors hypothesized that poor metabolic control, demonstrated by elevated mean Phe-levels in follow-up, would be associated with worse cognitive outcomes. Therefore, the authors aimed to 1) compare intellectual, EF and SC performance of PKU and typically developing children; 2) investigate associations between performance and Phe-fluctuations in the PKU group. Results may provide insights into the PKU neurocognitive phenotype that could be useful for clinical approaches. The interest in FE and CS skills was due to their associations with psychosocial outcomes, such as school performance and peer interaction in the short and mid-terms, and on quality of life in the long term.

Methods

This cross-sectional exploratory study undertook a quantitative analysis of the neuropsychological performance of children with PKU compared with age-matched healthy controls, approved by the local Ethics Committee (UNIFESP/protocol 2.879.610). All legal guardians provided informed consent and children provided assent for participation.

Participants

Twenty-seven children of both sexes diagnosed with Phenylketonuria (PKU group) and 28 children with neurotypical development (control group) aged between 7 and 15 years participated in the study. Children with PKU were recruited from those in clinical follow-up at Instituto Jô Clemente (IJC), a referral center for newborn screening. Control participants were recruited from public and private schools.

The PKU group was dichotomized according to baseline Phe-levels (i.e. before diet therapy) into "classical PKU" (n = 14), with levels above 1200 µmol/L (> 20 mg/dL); and "mild PKU" (n = 13) with levels between 360 and 1200 µmol/L (6-20 mg/dL). Exclusion criteria for the PKU group were lack of regular diet therapy and attendance at follow-up; for controls were reports of learning disabilities, and neurological or psychiatric disorders.

All PKU participants presented Phe-levels above 4 mg/dL until the 15th day of life. They were diagnosed in basic health units or maternity hospitals between the 3rd-5th day of life. Soon after diagnosis, children were referred for clinical follow-up with a multidisciplinary team. After a new assessment of Phe-levels to confirm PKU, nutritional management of Phe-ingestion comprising diet therapy and regular monitoring of levels was started. The frequency of return visits varies according to age: a) weekly for children between 0 and 6 months of age; b) fortnightly for 6-12 months; c) monthly for 1-2 years; d) quarterly for those over 2 years old. Follow-up includes psychological evaluations to monitor neurocognitive development.

Clinical characteristics

Clinical (PKU phenotype, Phe-levels), socio-demographic (age, sex, maternal education), and anthropometric (body mass index) variables of PKU participants were collected from medical records. Phe-levels were obtained by fluorometric method following Brazilian guidelines44 Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria SAS/MS n° 12. Protocolo clínico e diretrizes terapêuticas fenilcetonúria. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde. 2020. and performed by an expert. All met the necessary requirement to minimize the Phe-fluctuation as much as possible in the follow-up sampling: blood collection always at the same time in the morning; a 3-hour fasting period before the measurement of Phe, and the child's last meal before testing consisted of a Phe-source food, with the amount of amino acid prescribed by the dietician. The examination is part of the follow-up routine to monitor Phe-levels.

Four measures of the Phe-levels of each participant were considered. The first was collected after birth and defined the PKU phenotype. The classical PKU phenotype presented mean Phe-levels of 31.2 ± 10.5 mg/dL and the mild PKU had a mean of 15.1 ± 3.81 mg/dL. The other measures comprised the last three blood samples obtained before inclusion in the study. Individual fluctuations in Phe-levels were defined as a percentage variation from the last blood sample, i.e. relative variation (%variation Phe = SD*100 = X/M). The study member that executed the neuropsychological assessment was blinded to the PKU phenotype and to historical Phe-levels.

Neuropsychological investigation

The neuropsychological assessment included intellectual, EF and SC measures. For PKU children it was combined with regular clinical visits and performed individually in appropriate rooms at IJC. Controls were assessed in noise-controlled rooms at their schools, without prejudice to routine activities.

Intellectual performance

The validated Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI)1313 Wechsler D. Escala abreviada de inteligência Wechsler para crianças: WASI. Manual de instruções para aplicação e avaliação. In: Yates CM, Heck DB, eds. Adaptação e Padronização Brasileira: TRENTINI, São Paulo: Casa do Psicólogo; 2014. was used to assess intellectual performance. The WASI provides three main index scores: full intelligence quotient (IQ), verbal (VIQ), and performance IQ(PIQ).

Neuropsychological assessment

The developmental neuropsychological battery NEPSY-II adapted to Portuguese was used to investigate EF and SC.1414 Korkman M, Kirk U, Kemp II SN. Manual Clínico e Interpretativo. São Paulo: Pearson; 2019. The battery covers ages 3-16 years and is widely used in studies with neurodevelopmental disorders. Reports with clinical samples in the manual indicate high-reliability coefficients (rs = 0.85-0.87). Raw scores were used for analyses.

The subtests of the Attention and Executive Functions domain were used: Animal Sorting (AS; assesses cognitive flexibility); Auditory Attention (AA; selective attention); Response Set (RS; auditory attention and vigilance); and Inhibition (IN; inhibitory control and shifting). The protocol also included the digit span and Corsi block-tapping tests of working memory.1515 Strauss K, Sherman ES, Spren O. A Compendium of Neuropsychological tests: administration, norms, and Commentary. New York: Oxford University Press; 2006. Scores were the extent of digits (maximum 8) or cubes (maximum 7) repeated backward. The number of animals starting with given letters (F,A,S) generated in 60 s was the measures of semantic and verbal fluency, respectively.1515 Strauss K, Sherman ES, Spren O. A Compendium of Neuropsychological tests: administration, norms, and Commentary. New York: Oxford University Press; 2006.

The validated Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Functions (BRIEF) completed the EF assessment.1616 Carim DB, Miranda MC, Bueno OF. Tradução e adaptação para o português do behavior rating inventory of executive function - BRIEF. Psicol Reflex Crit. 2012;25:653-61. The main caretaker answered 86 questions about behaviors observed at home as "never", "sometimes", and "often". A threshold above 65 indicates a clinical profile.

Social Cognition (SC) was assessed using the subtests of Affect Recognition (AR) and Theory of Mind (ToM). The AR assesses children's ability to identify basic emotions in faces. The ToM assesses abilities to interpret beliefs, intentions, thoughts, and emotions from another person's perspective, among others.

Emotional and behavioral assessment

The Child Behavior Checklist - CBCL adapted for Brazilian children1717 Bordin IA, Mari JJ, Caeiro MF. Validação Da Versão Brasileira Do "Child Behavior Checklist" (CBCL) (Inventário De Comportamentos da Infância e Adolescência): Dados Preliminares. Revista ABP-APAL; 1995. p. 55-66. answered by caretakers was used for behavioral assessment. It comprises 113 questions about everyday behavior with responses being "not true", "sometimes/somewhat true" and "very often true", proving quantitative indices related to internalizing (somatic problems, anxiety, depression) and externalizing (rule-breaking behavior, aggressive behavior) profiles. A t-score > 65 indicates a clinically meaningful threshold.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was performed using the JAMOVI software (version 2.3.22). Descriptive statistics presented categorical data as absolute and relative frequencies, and numerical data as mean ± standard deviation, median, and confidence intervals when applicable. Generalized Linear Models (GzLM) were used to investigate differences in IQ between groups and identify the impact of variations among Phe-levels on dependent variables. Multivariate analysis of covariance (MANCOVA) was used to identify the effects of groups in a set of dependent variables adjusted by age and IQ. Finally, univariate, and multivariate linear regression analyses were performed to identify the clinical variables with the greatest impact on discrimination between groups. The level of significance adopted was p < 0.05.

Results

Clinical characteristics were similar in both groups, although the control group had more patients below 10 years of age (Table 1). Therefore, age was added as a covariate to avoid any confounding results. Since no significant difference was observed in IQ between the classical and mild phenotypes (p = 0.415), the PKU patients were not dichotomized into subgroups for the comparative analysis with the control group.

Table 1
Sociodemographic, anthropometric and clinical characteristics.

Participants with PKU presented significantly lower IQ scores compared to controls (89.8 ± 10.8 versus 109.0 ± 9.5, p = 0.001, respectively), with both VIQ (p < 0.001) and PIQ (p < 0.001) different among groups. Thus, IQ was also treated as a covariate in the AAANCOVA for EF and SC. The aim was to understand whether the EF and SC performance would be more explained by intelligence level rather than PKU presence.

In the EF analysis adjusted by age and IQ, significant differences between the control and PKU groups were observed only in the set of executive attention subtests (RS) of NEPSY-II (p = 0.029). The authors found significant associations of age with the following EF tasks: executive attention (p = 0.017); verbal fluency (p = 0.001), phonemic fluency (p ≤ 0.001), and semantic verbal fluency tasks (p < 0.001); working memory (p = 0.001); cognitive flexibility (p < 0.0021); and inhibitory control (p < 0.001). Yet, IQ was only associated with working memory (p = 0.013), cognitive flexibility (p = 0.012), and inhibitory control (p = 0.003) outcomes.

The SC set of variables (Table 2) was significantly different between groups (p = 0.003), adjusted by age and IQ. Groups differed significantly in the affective recognition (AR) task (p < 0.001), but not in ToM (p = 0.345). Age was associated with the overall SC scores (p = 0.001) and with both AR (p = 0.001) and ToM (p = 0.001) tasks. No significant associations were observed between IQ and the SC set of variables (p = 0.955).

Table 2
Comparison between groups covariated for age and IQ on EF and CS.

In the PKU group, the mean time variation among the collection of the three blood samples was 4.07 ± 1.67 months, maintaining stable fluctuations (p = 0.225). The Phe-levels were 7.56 ± 3.10 mg/dL at the first collection, 7.49 ± 3.59 mg/dL at the second, and 7.76 ± 3.90 mg/dL at the last. Individual mean variations of Phe-levels were 2.21 ± 1.50 mg/dL, which corresponded to a variation of 32.1 ± 21.0% between collections. To ensure the detection of relative oscillations in Phe-levels in PKU patients, the percentage change between the three time periods was used to define individual variation.

Relative Phe-variation was not correlated with total IQ (p = 0.32, Table 3), or with verbal (p = 0.96) or performance (p = 0.205) quotients. Among EF tests, relative Phe-variation was significantly correlated only with Corsi task scores and working memory index (p = 0.001). Relative Phe-variation was associated with phonemic verbal fluency scores (p = 0.004) and inhibitory control index (p = 0.035). Considering SC variables, it was associated with ToM test scores (p = 0.003).

Table 3
Influence of Phe-variation on observed outcomes.

Finally, the authors investigated whether the percentage change in Phe-would be a determinant for behavioral problems and EF, as reported by the main caretakers. Relative Phe-variation was not correlated with CBCL scores related to internalizing profile (p = 0.33) nor to externalizing profile (p = 0.52). In the BRIEF, relative Phe-variation was associated with inhibition (p = 0.04), initiative (p = 0.05) and working memory (p = 0.04) scores, and overall executive functioning index (p = 0.05, Table 4).

Table 4
Phe-variation as a determinant for CBCL and BRIEF scales.b b To analyze the results of Phe-variation as a determinant for the CBCL and BRIEF scales. Only patients in the clinical group who obtained a score above > 65 points were considered.

The authors also investigated which anthropometric and sociodemographic variables might be predictors of Phe-variation. The authors considered the following variables: age, sex, body mass index (BMI), maternal educational level, type of PKU, and the concentration of blood Phe-present in the first clinical examination.

In the first analysis (Table S1), the authors assessed the association of each variable separately (univariate). The authors considered the variables presenting p < 0.15 to compose the multivariate analysis and determine potential predictors. The authors identified age (p = 0.001) and BMI (p = 0.112) as possible predictors of Phe-variations. However, multivariate analysis showed that only age was an independent predictor for Phe-variations (p = 0.002).

Discussion

This study investigated EF and SC in a sample of children with classic and mild PKU undergoing diet therapy. Results suggest that poor metabolic control, demonstrated by uncontrolled Phe-levels, has a selective negative effect on cognitive domains, but not on intellectual performance. Phonemic verbal fluency, visuospatial working memory, EF and ToM skills were shown to be the most susceptible to worse metabolic control. There was no evidence of associations with internalizing or externalizing behavioral problems.

An initial topic of discussion concerns the association between metabolic control and intelligence. Children with PKU showed significantly lower IQ scores compared to controls, even in average ranges. These findings are similar to Gassió et al.1818 Gassió R, Artuch R, Vilaseca AAA, Fusté E, Boix C, Sans A, et al. Cognitive functions in classic Phenylketonuria and mild hyper-phenylalaninemia: experience in a pediatric population. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2005;47:443-8. results with a similar number of participants (n = 37) and mean Phe-values (444 ± 145 µmol/L; i.e. 7.33 ± 2.39 mg/dL), revealing IQs levels (100 ± 11.0) lower than controls (p = 0.001).

In the present study, Phe-variations did not predict IQ, which differs from previous findings as described by Hood et al.1919 Hood A, Grange DK, Christ SE, Steiner R, White DA. Variability in Phenylalanine control predicts IQ. and executive abilities in children with Phenylketonuria. Mol Genet Metab. 2014;111:445-51. in a sample of 47 children followed from birth to 10 years of age, where variations in Phe-levels were negatively correlated with IQs, although IQ was still average. Such results may be explained by the greater variability of Phe-in their sample (202.4 ± 84.4 µmol; 3.34 ± 1.39 mg/dL). Conversely, lower IQs have been associated with plasma concentration values obtained at the time of assessment and not with fluctuations in levels.2020 Feldmann R, Schallert M, Nguyen T, Och U, Rutsch F, Weglage J. Children and adolescents with Phenylketonuria display fluctuations in their blood Phenylalanine levels. Acta Pediatr. 2019;108:541-3. Differences in IQ may be less significant if blood Phe-concentrations are maintained between 120 and 360 µmol/L (2-6 mg/dL), in line with therapeutic goals recommended in PKU treatment.22 Vockley J, Andersson HC, Antshel KM, Braverman NE, Burton BK, Frazier DM, et al. Phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency: diagnosis and management. Genet Med. 2014;16:188-200.

Regarding EF, the present results showed that greater relative Phe-variation was associated with worse results in verbal fluency, visual-spatial working memory, and inhibitory control. Associations between dietary control (i.e. fluctuations in Phe-levels) and EF were reported in previous studies.2121 Huijbregts SC, de Sonneville LM, Licht R, van Spronsen FJ, Ver-kerk PH, Sergeant JA. Sustained attention and inhibition of cognitive interference in treated Phenylketonuria: associations with concurrent and lifetime Phenylalanine concentrations. Neuropsychologia. 2002;40:7-15. It is worth mentioning the specific difficulties shown by PKU children in inhibiting motor responses according to task changes. In the BRIEF, caretakers also reported behavioral signs of inhibitory control problems, besides low initiative in social contexts and working memory difficulties. The minor impact of dietary control observed on cognitive flexibility and verbal working memory, as well as discrepancies between verbal and non-verbal working memory, needs to be better understood in future studies.

Regarding SC, the present results suggest that children with PKU also show difficulties in recognizing emotions, but not infer people's mental states (ToM). An unexpected result was that metabolic control turned out to be a predictor only for ToM. A possible explanation is that emotional recognition is associated with the overall neurocognitive phenotypic characteristics of PKU and, therefore, less influenced by variations in Phe-levels. Jahja et al.55 Jahja R, van Spronsen FJ, de Sonneville LM, van der Meere JJ, Bosch AM, Hollak CE, et al. Social-cognitive functioning and social skills in patients with early treated Phenylketonuria: a PKU-COBESO study. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2016;39:355-62. identified broader changes in socio-cognitive functioning which were significantly associated with Phe-variations, especially among children over 12 years old. The authors concluded that Phe-control during childhood and early adolescence is important for better social functioning in adulthood. However, they did not differentiate performance in emotion recognition and ToM.

An important issue to discuss is that age was determinant for the performance of children with PKU in all components of EF and CS, although not in IQ, according to previous evidence.55 Jahja R, van Spronsen FJ, de Sonneville LM, van der Meere JJ, Bosch AM, Hollak CE, et al. Social-cognitive functioning and social skills in patients with early treated Phenylketonuria: a PKU-COBESO study. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2016;39:355-62.,66 Wade M, Prime H, Jenkins JM, et al. On the relation between theory of mind and executive functioning: a developmental cognitive neuroscience perspective. Psychon Bull Rev. 2018;25:2119-40.,77 Costello PM, Beasley MG, Tillotson SL, Smith I. Intelligence in mild atypical Phenylketonuria. Eur J Pediatr. 1994;153:260-3.,88 Sundermann B, Garde S, Dehghan Nayyeri M, Weglage J, Rau J, Pfleiderer B, et al. Approaching altered inhibitory control in Phenylketonuria: a functional MRI study with a Go-NoGo task in young female adults. Eur J Neurosci. 2020;52:3951-62.,99 White DA, Nortz MJ, Mandernach T, Huntington K, Steiner RD. Age-related working memory impairments in children with prefrontal dysfunction associated with phenylketonuria. J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2002;8:1-11.,1010 Anderson PJ, Wood SJ, Francis DE, Coleman L, Warwick L, Casanelia S, et al. Neuropsychological functioning in children with early-treated Phenylketonuria: impact of white matter abnormalities. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2004;46:230-8.,1111 Hawks ZW, Strube MJ, Johnson NX, Grange DK, White DA. Developmental trajectories of executive and verbal processes in children with phenylketonuria. Dev Neuropsychol. 2018;43: 207-18. It can be hypothesized that, due to the later maturation of the prefrontal cortex, self-regulatory executive skills have contributed to better performance among older participants.

The authors found that with each additional year of age, the variation in plasma Phe-concentration levels dropped by four percentage points. Differently from previous knowledge,2222 Palermo L, Geberhiwot T, MacDonald A, Limback E, Hall SK, Romani C. Cognitive outcomes in early-treated adults with Phenylketonuria (PKU): a comprehensive picture across domains. Neuropsychology. 2017;31:255-67. the younger the child, the higher the levels of Phe, suggesting a worse treatment adherence related to age. Due to inherent limitations of the sample size and natural Phe-fluctuations during the day, this data should be interpreted with caution. Future research is necessary to explore this controversy due to particular socio-economical and cultural issues in Latin America compared to European and American reports.2323 Martins AM, Pessoa ALS, Quesada AA, Ribeiro EM. Unmet needs in PKU and the disease impact on the day-to-day lives in Brazil: results from a survey with 228 patients and their caregivers. Mol Genet Metab Rep. 2020;24:100624.,2424 Pessoa ALS, Martins AM, Ribeiro EM, Specola N, Chiesa A, Vilela D, et al. Burden of phenylketonuria in Latin American patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2022;17:302.

The present study has limitations to be mentioned. Because of its cross-sectional design, the determination of individual Phe-fluctuations based on the relative variation of four measures does not necessarily reflect lifelong Phe-control. Additionally, although neuropsychological assessment was integrated into the patient's follow-up routine, the authors acknowledge that Phe-levels have a natural variation during the day and depend on the time of fasting and type of food ingested. Therefore, conclusions about associations between Phe-fluctuation and neurocognitive development can be limited and demand future studies.

In spite of limitations, the authors believe that the present study innovates by the emphasis done on SC, beyond EF, and associations with metabolic control due to dietary treatment. Furthermore, findings contribute to the literature on PKU, strengthening the important role of dietary control, especially in respect of the development of inhibitory control, visual-spatial working memory, and phonemic verbal fluency. Due to the extended maturation in frontal areas, such functions begin their development in early childhood and are associated with fluid intelligence, which is less influenced by academic learning.

Due to the lack of information on PKU in developing countries, it could be interesting to investigate Brazilian recommended levels of Phe-and practices to compare these data with international recommendations. Greater attention must be paid to the presence of higher Phe-concentrations, as this may be an important early sign of lack of adherence to diet, which may worsen in adolescence.2525 Garcia Ml, Araya G, Coo S, Waisbren SE, de la Parra A. Treatment adherence during childhood in individuals with phenylketonuria: early signs of treatment discontinuation. Mol Genet Metab Rep. 2017;11:54-8. Since diet-therapy is the only treatment option that does not seem to be sufficient to preserve neurodevelopment, new therapies have been developed, such as the use of sapropterin dihy-drochloride in responsive cases or enzyme replacement therapy with pegvaliase in patients older than 16 years.2626 Blau N, Longo N. Alternative therapies to address the unmet medical needs of patients with phenylketonuria. Expert Opin Pharmacother. 2015;16:791-800. Advantages of these new therapies include the possibility to increase the amount of food containing Phe-or even in some cases responsive to sapropterin dihydrochloride to skip totally the restricted diet, reaching normal protein diet with recommended Phe-levels improving patient nutrition. The disadvantages: this therapy is not universally successful (less than half of patients are responsive) and seems to work more in milder phenotypes; so some patients need to remain with combined treatment of diet and sapropterin, which increases therapeutic cost.2727 Muntau AC, Adams DJ, Bélanger-Quintana A, Bushueva TV, Cerone R, Chien YH, et al. International best practice for the evaluation of responsiveness to sapropterin dihydrochloride in patients with phenylketonuria. Mol Genet Metab. 2019;127:1-11. Instead, the enzyme replacement therapy with pegvaliase corrects the biochemical defect with normalization of Phe-levels under unrestricted diet, but allergic reaction, food neophobia and high cost are the disadvantages.2828 Viau K, Wessel A, Martell L, Sacharow S, Rohr F. Nutrition status of adults with phenylketonuria treated with pegvaliase. Mol Genet Metab. 2021;133:345-51. There are more options on the horizon coming out such as gene therapy2929 Grisch-Chan HM, Schwank G, Harding CO, Thöny B. State-of-the-art 2019 on gene therapy for phenylketonuria. Hum Gene Ther. 2019;30:1274-83. and a new oral drug PTC923 with the promise of being even more effective to more patients.3030 Bratkovic D, Margvelashvili L, Tchan MC, Nisbet J, Smith N. PTC923 (sepiapterin) lowers elevated blood phenylalanine in subjects with phenylketonuria: a phase 2 randomized, multi-center, three-period crossover, open-label, active controlled, all-comers study. Metabolism. 2022; 128:155116.

This study indicated that children with PKU may present selective impairments in executive functioning and social cognition, regardless of age and IQ. The higher the Phe-levels, the more important the executive function impairment seems to be. The association of neuropsychological screening with consultations for metabolic control can contribute to the early identification of cognitive deficits and the design of interventions in clinical settings.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the Associação Fundo de Incentivo à Pesquisa (AFIP) and Instituto Jô Clemente

Supplementary materials

Supplementary material associated with this article can be found in the online version at doi:10.1016/j.jped.2023.04.003.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    13 Oct 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    23 Nov 2022
  • Accepted
    04 Apr 2023
  • Published
    10 May 2023
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