管理先天性高胰岛素血症:多学科方法改善结果

Amanda M. Ackermann, A. Palladino
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引用次数: 16

摘要

先天性高胰岛素血症(CHI)是儿童患者持续低血糖的最常见原因,并与低血糖发作和发育迟缓的显著风险相关。CHI是由至少9个在调节β细胞胰岛素分泌中起作用的基因突变引起的。因此,CHI患者胰岛素分泌失调,对血糖水平无反应。CHI的每种不同遗传病因都与影响管理决策的特定临床特征相关。鉴于CHI具有广泛的非典型谱系和相对罕见的患病率,重要的是由有CHI经验的临床医生和管理该疾病所必需的多个亚专科服务对CHI患者进行评估。在这篇综述中,我们总结了CHI的病理生理和遗传原因,然后主要集中在最常见的遗传原因(ATP门控钾(K ATP)通道突变),以进一步讨论诊断,医疗和外科治疗,以及潜在的急性和慢性并发症。我们提供来自相关发表的研究和报告的见解,以及来自我们中心照顾400多名CHI患者的临床经验的轶事信息。仔细评估每个患者的个体病理生理是必要的,以确定适当的治疗方案,并继续密切随访和监测疾病和治疗相关的并发症是必不可少的。尽管在过去几年中在诊断和管理方面取得了重大进展,但鉴于CHI患者的发病率仍然很高,改进的诊断技术和新的治疗选择将受到欢迎。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Managing congenital hyperinsulinism: improving outcomes with a multidisciplinary approach
Congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI) is the most common cause of persistent hypo- glycemia in pediatric patients and is associated with significant risk of hypoglycemic seizures and developmental delays. CHI results from mutations in at least nine genes that play a role in regulating beta-cell insulin secretion. Thus, patients with CHI have dysregulated insulin secretion that is unresponsive to blood glucose level. Each different genetic etiology of CHI is associated with particular clinical characteristics that affect management decisions. Given the broad phe- notypic spectrum and relatively rare prevalence of CHI, it is important that patients with CHI be evaluated by clinicians experienced with CHI and the multiple subspecialty services that are necessary for the management of the disorder. In this review, we summarize the pathophysiology and genetic causes of CHI and then focus primarily on the most common genetic cause (muta- tions in the ATP-gated potassium (K ATP ) channel) for further discussion of diagnosis, medical and surgical management, and potential acute and chronic complications. We provide insight from relevant published studies and reports, in addition to anecdotal information from our center's clinical experience in caring for over 400 patients with CHI. Careful assessment of each patient's individual pathophysiology is necessary to determine the appropriate treatment regimen, and continued close follow-up and monitoring of disease- and treatment-related complications are essential. Although significant improvements have been made in the past several years with regard to diagnosis and management, given the continued high morbidity rate in patients with CHI, improved diagnostic techniques and new therapeutic options would be welcomed.
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