The management and clinical outcomes of pregnancy in a female with glycogen storage disease type IIIA caused by rare variant
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URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10902/37788DOI: 10.1002/jmd2.70030
ISSN: 2192-8304
ISSN: 2192-8312
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Puente Ruiz, Nuria; Palaniappan, Saru; Woodall, Alison; Cooper, Robert; Terry, Allyson; Oldham, Andrew; Rosseau, Abigail; Campbell, Christopher; Vasudevan, Pradeep; Stepien, Karolina M.Fecha
2025Derechos
© 2025 The Author(s). JIMD Reports published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.
Publicado en
JIMD Reports, 2025, 66, e70030
Editorial
Wiley
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Palabras clave
Cardiac MR
Cardiomyopathy
Genomic rearrangement
Glycogen storage disease type IIIA
Pregnancy
Resumen/Abstract
Glycogen storage disease type III (GSD III) is an inborn error of carbohydrate metabolism with an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern. Phenotypically, patients can manifest a broad clinical spectrum. Most patients affected with GSD IIIA (85%) have a non-functional GDE enzyme primarily affecting the liver and cardiac/skeletal muscle (Type IIIA). Initial clinical manifestations of GSD IIIA present in the first year of life. Presentation is very similar to GSD type I. Up to 98% of children affected have hepatomegaly, hypoglycaemia (53%) with marked ketosis (34%), short stature (49%), delayed puberty, and frequent infections (17%). In adulthood, they may have cirrhosis, adenomas, or hepatocarcinomas (11%), cardiomyopathy (58%) and myopathy (34%). Pregnancy has been documented in women with GSD III. Nutritional requirements are increased during pregnancy, especially in the third trimester. We report the management of a woman with GSD IIIA found to be compound heterozygous for two pathogenic AGL variants, c.798C>G p.(Tyr266Ter) and c.4258_4259ins? p.(Asp1420fs), who had a planned pregnancy. Cardiac outcomes are also described/discussed.
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