Title: Modifiers of Metabolism New Frontier of Antidotal Therapy
1Modifiers ofMetabolismNew Frontier
ofAntidotal Therapy
2CarnitineAn Antidote(?) forMitochondrial Toxins
- Jeffrey Suchard, MD FACEP FACMT
- Associate Professor of Clinical Emergency
Medicine - Director of Medical Toxicology
- Department of Emergency Medicine
- University of California, Irvine Medical Center
- e-mail jsuchard_at_uci.edu
3Goals / Objectives
- Discuss the use of Carnitine to treat toxicity
from agents that inhibit mitochondrial fatty acid
?-oxidation - particularly Valproic acid
- Review the ongoing research regarding carnitines
role as an antidote - Describe potential future areas for carnitine
toxicologic research
4The Big Picture What the world looks like to the
mitochondria in your liver
- Each cycle of ß-oxidation removes a 2-carbon unit
(acetyl-CoA) from fatty acid - NADH produced powers the electron transport chain
- Acetyl-CoA enters Krebs cycle, producing more
NADH, FADH2, and GTP - Lots of ATP per fatty acid!
- Main job produce Acetyl Coenzyme A
- the unit of currency for cellular energy
- We will focus on fatty acid oxidation
- How to turn long carbon chains (fatty acids) into
two-carbon units (acetyl-CoA)
5Fatty Acid ß-Oxidation
- Occurs in the mitochondrial matrix
- But how do the fatty acids get there in the first
place? - Carboxylic acids are charged, and dont cross
membranes easily - There are two lipid bilayer membranes to cross in
order to enter the matrix
- Carnitine Shuttle
- Carnitine essential carrier molecule for fatty
acid entry into mitochondrial matrix
6Causes of ImpairedFatty Acid ß-Oxidation
- Genetic
- ß-Oxidation enzyme deficiencies
- MCAD deficiency is most common
- Carnitine and/or CoA sequestration
- Exogenous
- Reyes Syndrome
- Viral illness impairsß-Oxidation
- So does aspirin!
- Dideoxynucleosides
- Used for HIV
- Impairs mitochondrial DNA synthesis
- Ackee fruit
- Jamaican vomiting sickness
- Valproic acid
7Consequences of ImpairedFatty Acid ß-Oxidation
- Microvesicular Steatosis
- Form of fatty liver from accumulation of
non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA)
- ? ATP from fat, yet gluconeogenesis also impaired
- Hypoglycemia
- Other pathways impaired by accumulated abnormal
metabolites - Krebs cycle
- Urea cycle
- Oxidative phosphorylation
- Electron transport
8Toxidrome of Impairedß-Oxidation
- Abnormal Labs
- Metabolic Acidosis
- Lactic Acidosis
- Hypoglycemia
- Hypoketonemia
- Hyperammonemia
- Dicarboxylic Acidemia
- FA undergo ?-oxidation
- Hepatic Injury
- ? LFTs, ? PT
- Abnormal Cell Structure
- Microvesicular Steatosis
- Accumulated NEFAs
- Abnormal Mitochondria
9Valproic Acid
- The most commonly encountered agent that
significantly inhibits fatty acidß-oxidation - Therapeutic use
- Overdose
- One of the most studied exogenous inhibitors of
fatty acid ß-oxidation
10Valproic Acid
- Short-chain, branchedfatty acid
- 2-n-propylpentanoic acid
- dipropylacetic acid
- Initially handled likeother fatty acids
- Transformed into valproyl-CoAand
valproyl-carnitine - sequesters carnitine intra-mitochondrial CoA
- can lead to inhibition of ?-oxidation of FAs
11Valproate (VPA) Metabolism
- Sequesters carnitine
- ? renal loss
- Indirectly inhibits normal FA ß-oxidation
- VPA undergoesß-oxidation and?-oxidation,
forming multiple metabolites - 4-en-VPA seems tobe the most toxic
12Mitochondrial Toxicity in Therapeutic VPA Dosing
- Asymptomatic ? LFTs and ? NH3 common
- Up to 44 of patients in first 3 months
- ? VPA hepatotoxicity with concurrent CYP-inducing
anticonvulsants - Mediated via ? 4-en-VPA formation
- Infrequent Reyes-like syndrome
- Mainly in children, 1st to 4th month of therapy
13VPA HepatotoxicityHyperammonemia
- Defined as NH3 level gt 80 ?g/dL
- Occurs in 35-45 of patients
- Proposed mechanism is
- Urea Cycle Dysfunction
- How does VPA / inhibition of ?-oxidation affect
the urea cycle?
14Speculative Effects of VPA on Intermediary
Metabolism
- VPA requires Carnitine to enter mitochondria
- Valproylcarnitine ester eliminated in urine
- Results in relative carnitine deficiency
- VPA also inhibits ?-oxidation by sequestering
unbound CoASH - Limits formation of Fatty Acyl-CoAs
- Limits formation of Acetyl-CoA
- ? activation of pyruvate carboxylase
- ? levels of Aspartate and Glutamate
15 L-Carnitine
- 3-hydroxy-4-trimethylammonium butyrate
- Modulates Fatty Acyl-CoA/CoASH ratios
- Acyl-CoA Carnitine ? Acylcarnitine CoASH
- Supplementation converts Valproyl-CoA to
Valproylcarnitine ? excreted in the urine - Frees up Coenzyme A, and restores normal Fatty
Acyl-CoA/CoASH ratios - Allows ?-oxidation to occur unimpeded
16Pharmaceutical Carnitine
- Only commercially-available drug is Carnitor
(Sigma-Tau Pharmaceuticals) - FDA-approved for
- Primary systemic carnitine deficiency
- Inborn errors of metabolism resultingin
secondary carnitine deficiency - Prevention/treatment of carnitinedeficiency in
ESRD patientsundergoing dialysis - Not approved for VPAor other ß-ox inhibitors!
17Carnitine Side-Effects
- Per product insert
- Nausea / Vomiting
- Gastritis
- Seizures
- Body Odor
- Smells like rotting fish!
- Trimethylamine(?)
- When used as antidotal therapyfor VPA toxicity
- 251 doses of carnitine given to VPA overdose
patients with ?NH3 with no allergic rxns or
side-effects reported - LoVecchio et al.Am J Emerg Med 200523321
18Who Needs Carnitine?
- A subject of potential antidotal research
- Consensus statement Epilepsia 1998391216
- Carnitine is clearly indicated in cases of
VPA-induced hepatoxicity, VPA overdose, 1?
carnitine-transporter defect - Strongly recommended also for
- 2? carnitine deficiency syndromes, symptomatic
VPA-associated hyperammonemia, renal symptoms for
dialysis patients, kids lt2 yrs on multiple
anticonvulsants, seizure patients on ketogenic
diets, premies on TPN
19Evidence for Carnitine Efficacy
- Mostly from Pediatric Neurology literature
- All 15 pts (35 of study population)with NH3
gt100 had significant decreases in NH3 when given
supplemental carnitine - Bohles et al. Acta Paediatr 199685446.
- A child with VPA overdose (serum level 1316)
had ? ?-oxidation products (inc. 4-en-VPA) and ?
ß-oxidation products, which improved after IV and
PO carnitine supplementation - Ishikura et al. J Anal Toxicol 19962055
20Evidence for Carnitine Efficacy
- Among 92 pts with severe VPA-induced
hepatotoxicity in a retrospective review,50
survived when given carnitine versus only 10
with supportive care - Bohan et al. Neurology 2001561405
- Serum NH3 half-life decreased from42.1 ( 42.1)
hrs to6.1 ( 3.6) hrs - Statistically non-significant
- Various tx modalities, inc. hemodialysis
- Sztajnkrycer et al. J Toxicol Clin Toxicol
200139497
21Summary ofEvidence for Carnitine Efficacy
- There are no blinded or prospective studies
showing improved outcome with carnitine therapy - e.g. decreased length-of-stay
- However, some metabolic measures of toxicity
appear to improve with carnitine - Serum ammonia decreases
- ?-oxidation products decrease
22What are the current indications for using
Carnitine in VPA overdose?
- IV carnitine is recommended for
- Coma
- Climbing serum NH3 levels
- Patients with VPA level gt450 mg/L
- Perez A, McKay CA. Role of carnitine in valproic
acid toxicity.J Toxicol Clin Toxicol 200341899 - Some advocate that hyperammonemia is the 1?
(sole?) indication - Sztajnkrycer. J Toxicol Clin Toxicol 200240789.
23Carnitine Dosing for VPA Toxicity
- Optimal dose remains undetermined
- More potential research questions
- Is there a minimum effective dose?
- Does this really matter?
- Why not give a lot, since carnitine is fairly
safe? - Does route of dosing matter?
- IV vs. PO
24Carnitine Dosing Regimens
- 1996 Pediatric Neurology Advisory Committee
consensus guidelines - 100 mg/kg/day (? 2g) PO in divided doses
- Kids on chronic VPA tx
- Manufacturer recs
- Adult 990 mg PO 2-3/day
- Peds 50-100 mg/kg/day PO in divided doses
(? 3g)
- Reported regimens for Overdose / ?NH3
- 150-500 mg/kg/day (? 3g) intravenously
- 100 mg/kg IV load,then 250 mg/kg q8h
- 150 mg/kg IV load,then 500 mg q8h
- 25 mg/kg IV q6h
- 100 mg/kg/day NG
- 3g PO load, then660 mg PO q8h
25Most Recent Recommendations
- Acute Overdose without Hepatotoxicity
- 100 mg/kg/day, divided q6h
- Up to 3g/day
- Didnt specify whether carnitine was to be given
PO or IV, but probably PO
- Acute Overdose with symptomatic Hyperammonemiaor
Hepatotoxicity - 100 mg/kg IV load over 30 min (max. 6g)
- then 15 mg/kg q4h over 10-30 min until clinical
improvement occurs
Russell S. Carnitine as an antidote for acute
valproate toxicity in children. Curr Opin
Pediatr 200719206 Review article