Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T20:22:00.208Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pompe Disease: Diagnosis and Management. Evidence-Based Guidelines from a Canadian Expert Panel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2016

Mark Tarnopolsky
Affiliation:
Department of Paediatrics, McMaster University Medical Centre, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Department of Medicine, McMaster University Medical Centre, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Neuromuscular and Neurometabolic Diseases Clinic, McMaster University Medical Centre, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Hans Katzberg
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine (Neurology), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Basil J. Petrof
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Respiratory Division, McGill University, Montreal, Québec, Canada
Sandra Sirrs
Affiliation:
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Harvey B. Sarnat
Affiliation:
Departments of Paediatrics, Pathology (Neuropathology) and Clinical Neurosciences, Alberta Children’s Hospital, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Kimberley Myers
Affiliation:
Department of Paediatric Cardiology, University of Calgary, Alberta Children’s Hospital, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Nicolas Dupré
Affiliation:
Faculty of Medicine, Laval University, Québec City, Québec, Canada Clinic of Neuromuscular and Neurogenetic Diseases of the CHU de Québec, Québec City, Québec, Canada
Dubravka Dodig
Affiliation:
Neurology Division, Department of Medicine, University Health Network/Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Angela Genge
Affiliation:
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Québec City, Québec, Canada
Shannon L. Venance
Affiliation:
Clinical Neurological Sciences, Western University, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, Canada
Lawrence Korngut
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Julian Raiman
Affiliation:
Department of Paediatrics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Division of Clinical and Metabolic Genetics, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Aneal Khan
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Genetics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada Department of Paediatrics, University of Calgary, Calgary, AlbertaCanada.
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Pompe disease is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by a deficiency of the enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase. Patients have skeletal muscle and respiratory weakness with or without cardiomyopathy. The objective of our review was to systematically evaluate the quality of evidence from the literature to formulate evidence-based guidelines for the diagnosis and management of patients with Pompe disease. The literature review was conducted using published literature, clinical trials, cohort studies and systematic reviews. Cardinal treatment decisions produced seven management guidelines and were assigned a GRADE classification based on the quality of evidence in the published literature. In addition, six recommendations were made based on best clinical practices but with insufficient data to form a guideline. Studying outcomes in rare diseases is challenging due to the small number of patients, but this is in particular the reason why we believe that informed treatment decisions need to consider the quality of the evidence.

Résumé

Diagnostic et prise en charge de la maladie de Pompe : lignes directrices fondées sur des données probantes, élaborées par un comité d’experts. La maladie de Pompe est une maladie de surcharge lysosomale due à un déficit en alpha-glucosidase acide. Les patients présentent une faiblesse des muscles squelettiques ainsi qu’une atteinte respiratoire, avec ou sans cardiomyopathie. Le but de notre revue était d’évaluer systématiquement la qualité des données de la littérature sur ce sujet et d’élaborer des lignes directrices fondées sur des données probantes pour le diagnostic et la prise en charge des patients atteints de la maladie de Pompe. Nous avons procédé à une revue de la littérature incluant les essais cliniques, les études de cohorte et les revues systématiques. Sept lignes directrices de traitement ont été élaborées concernant les décisions fondamentales de traitement et nous les avons classées au moyen de la méthodologie GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) évaluant la qualité des données de la littérature. De plus, nous avons émis 6 recommandations fondées sur des pratiques cliniques exemplaires, mais pour lesquelles les données étaient insuffisantes pour établir une ligne directrice. L’étude des résultats du traitement de maladies rares constitue un défi à cause du petit nombre de patients atteints de ces maladies. Cependant c’est la raison pour laquelle nous croyons qu’il est important de considérer la qualité des données disponibles afin de prendre des décisions de traitement éclairées.

Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Inc. 2016 

Introduction

Pompe disease (OMIM 606800) is a lysosomal storage disease characterized by deficiency of the enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase leading to myopathy, respiratory weakness, physical disability and premature death.Reference Kishnani, Steiner, Bali, Berger, Byrne and Case 1 The symptoms manifest as a continuum from birth through to adulthood, with a recognized severe infantile-onset form that is associated with cardiomyopathy and high mortality, to late-onset forms that are primarily characterized as weakness of limb-girdle and respiratory muscles but usually without cardiomyopathy.Reference Kishnani, Steiner, Bali, Berger, Byrne and Case 1 Pompe disease is rare, and these guidelines evaluate the quality of evidence from the medical literature to provide recommendations for management and to inform practitioners who may not be familiar with Pompe disease on the essential aspects of identifying and caring for patients.

The guidelines were designed by a multidisciplinary panel of Canadian physicians who manage patients with Pompe disease, have knowledge of the resources available throughout the country and draw upon evidence from peer-reviewed literature. The level of evidence was examined based on the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine and the international GRADE group approach to clinical guidelines. 2 , Reference Guyatt, Gutterman, Baumann, Addrizzo-Harris, Hylek and Phillips 3 If there were sufficient data from the literature to rate the quality of evidence, the treatment choices resulted in a Management Guideline (Table 1). Where there were insufficient or inconsistent data from the literature but the issue was considered important to the overall health of a patient with Pompe disease, these were tabled as Recommendations (Table 1). An evidence-based grading approach has not been used in previous recommendations for the treatment of Pompe disease. Patients with the condition and their caregivers are faced with important choices and need to make decisions about which treatments to consider. Disease-modifying or life-sustaining treatments, be they recombinant enzyme therapy or mechanical ventilation, require significant resources, and the evidence for these decisions needs to be carefully evaluated. The guidelines are not intended to be restrictive, to prescribe a standard of management or to serve as a substitute for decision-making by the patients, their families and their care team. They are intended to provide guidance that can inform the care team about the evidence from the medical literature.

Table 1 Management Guidelines and Recommendations for Pompe Disease

CRIM=cross-reactive immunologic material; ERT=enzyme replacement therapy; HSAT=high sustained antibody titres; ITI=immune tolerance induction; LPOD=late-onset Pompe disease.

Clinical Phenotypes

Infantile Pompe Disease

Infantile-onset Pompe disease presents during the first few months of life with symptoms of hypotonia, generalized muscle weakness and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. There is a high mortality rate by one year of age if untreated.Reference Kishnani and Howell 4 , Reference Kishnani, Hwu, Mandel, Nicolino, Yong and Corzo 5 At about four months of age, the vast majority of patients show hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, cardiomegaly, hypotonia, respiratory insufficiency, feeding difficulties and failure to thrive. Musculoskeletal abnormalities are also present in about two-thirds of patients by this age and are characterized by proximal muscle weakness in the upper and lower extremities, truncal weakness, macroglossia, hepatomegaly and hypotonia leading to delayed motor development.Reference Byrne, Kishnani, Case, Merlini, Müller-Felber and Prasad 6 , Reference van den Hout, Hop, van Diggelen, Smeitink, Smit and Poll-The 7 Swallowing and feeding difficulties are virtually universal in infantsReference Byrne, Kishnani, Case, Merlini, Müller-Felber and Prasad 6 , Reference Jones, Muller, Lin, Banugaria, Case and Li 8 and contribute to poor growth and nutrition.

Cardiac involvement is the hallmark of the initial presentation of infantile Pompe disease. A first clinical evaluation can involve a chest X-ray to evaluate for cardiomegaly in its infantile form. Echocardiography is invaluable in assessing ventricular structure and function. Hypertrophy, predominantly affecting the left ventricular posterior wall and interventricular septum, is typically seen in infants at diagnosis and may also be identified prenatally.Reference Hamdan, El-Zoabi, Begam, Mirghani and Almalik 9 Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction may be present. The hypertrophic cardiomyopathy results in systolic and diastolic dysfunction that may progress to congestive heart failure. The dysfunctional left ventricle may be dilated as well as hypertrophied, and there can be underlying myocardial fibrosis detected by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.Reference Barker, Pasquali, Darty, Ing, Li and Kim 10 Systolic dysfunction, defined as a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) less than 40%, was not seen until after 5 months of age in a cohort of 40 infants.Reference Chen, Chen, Chiu, Chien, Lee and Lin 11 The typical electrocardiographic features of Pompe disease include a shortened PR interval, pronounced ventricular voltages and repolarization abnormalities. Arrhythmias can be present, including supraventricular tachyarrhythmias and ventricular ectopy.Reference Chen, Chen, Chiu, Chien, Lee and Lin 11 - Reference Fung, Lo and Ho 14

Late-Onset Pompe Disease

Late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) is often used to describe all patients with Pompe disease who do not have a typical infantile (cardiomyopathy) presentation.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, Hop, Reuser, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 15 The majority of patients with LOPD present with weakness beginning when they are adults, although the history of symptoms in some patients can be traced back to childhood and in some circumstances to less than one year of age.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16 There have been estimates that the prevalence of late-onset Pompe disease is ~1:57,000, while for the infantile form it is ~1:138,000, but no studies have been performed in Canada.Reference Ausems, Verbiest, Hermans, Kroos, Beemer and Wokke 17 Compared with the infantile form, LOPD is considered a “milder” phenotype, likely due to higher residual enzyme activity,Reference van der Beek, Hagemans, Reuser, Hop, van der Ploeg and van Doorn 18 but there is still a significant impact on morbidity, quality of life (QoL) and life expectancy.Reference Güngör, de Vries, Hop, Reuser, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 19 , Reference Schuller, Wenninger, Strigl-Pill and Schoser 20 Late-onset Pompe can present in childhood and juvenile forms in the paediatric population, as well as in adulthood. Although these distinctions can be helpful descriptively, there is poor correlation between age of onset and phenotype or disease severity.Reference Laforêt, Nicolino, Eymard, Puech, Caillaud and Poenaru 21 The most common presentation is proximal limb-girdle, lower extremity and trunk muscle weakness. Patients may reveal a history of difficulties with such gross motor activities as walking, running, climbing stairs, rising from a sitting position or trying to get up after lying down.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16 , Reference van der Beek, de Vries, Hagemans, Hop, Kroos and Wokke 22 - Reference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24 These symptoms often precede the definitive diagnosis by approximately 7 to 10 years,Reference Müller-Felber, Horvath, Gempel, Podskarbi, Shin, Pongratz and Walter 25 with symptom onset occurring at an average age range of 27-35 years of age.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16 , Reference Laforêt, Nicolino, Eymard, Puech, Caillaud and Poenaru 26 Although unique presentations such as rigid spine syndrome have been described in the juvenile age group, these have also been reported in older patients and should be considered regardless of age of presentation.Reference Kostera-Pruszczyk, Opuchlik, Lugowska, Nadaj, Bojakowski and Tylki-Szymanska 27 , Reference Panosyan, Fitzpatrick and Bolton 28 Some patients can also have primary or coexistent atypical patterns of weakness, including ptosis, facial diplegia, ophthalmoplegia, fascio-scapulo-humeral, and scapulo-peroneal or paraspinal muscle atrophy.Reference Wens, van Gelder, Kruijshaar, de Vries, van der Beek and Reuser 29 - Reference Yanovitch, Banugaria, Proia and Kishnani 31 In addition, some patients can present with respiratory weakness as an initial manifestation of the disease,Reference Müller-Felber, Horvath, Gempel, Podskarbi, Shin, Pongratz and Walter 25 with respiratory failure precipitated by infection, aspiration or surgical intervention.Reference Rosenow and Engel 32 - Reference Moufarrej and Bertorini 35 Some studies have shown that there may be a group of late-onset patients younger than 15 years of age with prominent respiratory dysfunction and early dependence on continuous ventilation; however, this type of presentation can also occur in adult patients.Reference Laforêt, Nicolino, Eymard, Puech, Caillaud and Poenaru 21 With disease progression, greater involvement of upper extremity muscles and respiratory insufficiency may ensue, with respiratory failure being the leading cause of death.Reference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a rare finding in LOPD. Electrical abnormalities predominate as the cardiac pathology. In a French registry, an estimated prevalence of 3% of LOPD patients developed complete heart block.Reference Sacconi, Wahbi, Theodore, Garcia, Salviati and Bouhour 13 Supraventricular and ventricular tachyarrhythmias are also relatively common—affecting up to 29% of patients.Reference Schuller, Wenninger, Strigl-Pill and Schoser 20 The electrocardiogram of some patients with Pompe disease may suggest ventricular pre-excitation (Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome), but pathology studies of mouse models show generalized disruption of the annulus fibrosis associated with glycogen storage disease rather than the presence of a myocardial bypass tract.Reference Arad, Moskowitz, Patel, Ahmad, Perez-Atayde and Sawyer 36 , Reference Limongelli and Fratta 37 There may be an insulating effect on the cardiac conduction system provided by the glycogen within myocytes that disrupts normal conduction barriers between the atria and ventricles and enhances electrical conduction. This phenomenon has implications in the treatment of supraventricular tachycardia due to its poor amenability to radiofrequency catheter ablation. There are recent descriptions of dilated arteriopathy of the aorta in patients with late-onset Pompe disease, aneurysm formation and dissection in up to 12.5% of patients in a German cohort of 40 late-onset Pompe disease patients.Reference Schuller, Wenninger, Strigl-Pill and Schoser 20 , Reference El-Gharbawy, Bhat, Murillo, Thurberg, Kampmann and Mengel 38

Pathology and Pathophysiology

Muscle histochemistry in Pompe disease manifests as glycogen accumulation in membrane-bound vesicles (lysosomes).Reference Carpenter and Karpati 39 , Reference Dubowitz, Sewry and Oldfors 40 A secondary mitochondrial cytopathy has also been described.Reference Carpenter and Karpati 39 - Reference Sarnat and Marin-Garcia 42 These histopathologic changes are widespread, occurring in many organs and tissues, but skeletal muscle is the most frequently studied tissue. In skeletal muscle biopsies, degenerative myofibres are recognized by their shrunken nuclei with condensed chromatin. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained myofibres in formalin and paraffin-fixed tissue sections show vacuolization; periodic acid Schiff staining reveals an abundance of glycogen.Reference Schlenska, Heene, Spalke and Seiler 43 Increased lysosomal abundance is demonstrated by acid phosphatase staining.Reference Werneck, Lorenzoni, Kay and Scola 44 Ultrastructural examination of muscle using electron microscopy shows vacuolar myopathy, and glycogen granules are observed within some (but not all) vacuoles.Reference Fernández, Fernández, Cervera, Teijeira, Teijeiro and Domínguez 41 Glycogen granules are also seen in non-membrane-bound free aggregates in the subsarcolemmal sarcoplasm. Though the detection of vacuoles within myofibres can be made at the light-microscopic level, electron microscopy defines the anatomic relations better at a subcellular level. Furthermore, paraffin and frozen sections each have different but significant artefacts that at times might be misinterpreted as vacuoles. The histologic and ultrastructural changes in cardiac muscle are similar, and the smooth muscle of the gastroenteric tract as well as the tunica media of large- and medium-sized arteries can be affected.Reference Hobson-Webb, Proia, Thurberg, Banugaria, Prater and Kishnani 45 Excessive glycogen accumulation has also been noted in cells of the central nervous system, but nervous tissue is not used for diagnostic purposes in patients with Pompe disease.Reference Martini, Ciana, Benettoni, Katouzian, Severini and Bussani 46 , Reference Martin, de Barsy, van Hoof and Palladini 47 Smooth muscle cells within blood vessel walls also accumulate glycogen and may compromise wall integrity and contribute to the propensity for aneurysm formation.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis of Pompe disease is challenging given the heterogeneous presentation of symptoms, particularly in patients with LOPD.Reference Parise, Phillips, Kaczor and Tarnopolsky 48 The wide range of symptoms in Pompe disease can mimic those of other myopathies and neuromuscular junction disorders.Reference Parise, Phillips, Kaczor and Tarnopolsky 48 Electromyography can be a clue to the diagnosis, with spontaneous activity (fibrillations, positive sharp waves) and small, brief early recruiting potentials often presenting with greatest frequency in the paraspinal muscles.

The diagnosis of Pompe disease is usually established by demonstrating a deficiency in acid alpha-glucosidase enzyme activity and finding disease-causing mutations using DNA analysis of the GAA gene. DNA analysis can involve traditional targeted Sanger sequencing after the enzymatic deficiency result is obtained, but it is recognized that newer methods involving massive parallel sequencing (such as whole or targeted exome sequencing) may be used as the initial test for sequencing of the GAA gene. Pompe disease is autosomal recessive. When there are known disease-causing mutations in a family, finding the mutations on both alleles (trans) in a patient with a known family history of Pompe disease is sufficient for diagnosis without enzyme testing. The finding of one known mutation and a sequence variant (a DNA change with unproven pathogenicity) or two sequence variants of possible pathogenicity requires confirmation using an enzymatic assay from such sources as a dried blood spot, a skin fibroblast culture and a peripheral blood lymphocyte culture, or histological evidence from a muscle biopsy. There was a consensus among the authors that an initial screening test using dried blood spot enzyme analysis is convenient as well as time- and cost-effective, but the risk of false positive tests is high and a positive dried blood spot result requires a confirmatory DNA test in order to make a diagnosis of Pompe disease.

Muscle biopsy as the initial investigation for a patient with a high pre-test probability of Pompe disease is not recommended nor necessary in any age group.Reference Vissing, Lukacs and Straub 49 If the muscle biopsy is suggestive of Pompe disease, a second approved method such as enzyme analysis or DNA testing should be used to confirm the diagnosis. A negative muscle biopsy does not exclude Pompe disease.

Natural History

Mortality and Morbidity

Infantile-Onset Pompe Disease

In a retrospective review of 168 patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease, the median age at symptom onset was 2 months (range 0-12 months),Reference Byrne, Kishnani, Case, Merlini, Müller-Felber and Prasad 6 the median age at first ventilator support was 5.9 months (range 0.1-31.1 months), and the median age at death was 8.7 months of age (range 0.3-73.4 months). The overall survival rates at 12 and 18 months of age were 25.7 and 12.3%, respectively. Data from the Pompe disease registry showed that 23% of the 742 documented patients had symptom onset at ≤12 months of age.Reference Byrne, Kishnani, Case, Merlini, Müller-Felber and Prasad 6 A subset of these patients (88%) displayed cardiomyopathy that was consistent with classical infantile-onset Pompe disease. Another review of 225 cases of Pompe diseaseReference Byrne, Kishnani, Case, Merlini, Müller-Felber and Prasad 6 showed that cardiac symptoms primarily occurred in patients with symptom onset at ≤1 year of age.Reference Winkel, Hagemans, van Doorn, Loonen, Hop and Reuser 50 Causes of death in patients with symptom onset at ≤12 months of age were respiratory insufficiency and cardiac failure; the median age at death among patients with cardiomyopathy was 0.99 years.

Late-Onset Pompe Disease

The rate of disease progression in late-onset Pompe disease is variable. Results from a 12-month study of 58 adult patients with late-onset Pompe diseaseReference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24 showed that upper and lower extremity weakness, impaired walking ability and respiratory muscle weakness were noted on the basis of predicted values for quantitative muscle testing, a 6-minute walk test (6-MWT) and pulmonary function testing. Significant declines in arm and leg strength as well as a decline in pulmonary function were observed during the study period. Symptom duration was the best predictor of skeletal and respiratory muscle weakness,Reference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24 , Reference Hagemans, Winkel, Hop, Reuser, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 15 while early manifestations of the disease (<15 years of age) implied early wheelchair or ventilator dependence and a rapidly progressive disease course. In a longitudinal study over 16 years,Reference van der Beek, Hagemans, Reuser, Hop, van der Ploeg and van Doorn 18 50% of patients became wheelchair-bound and 19% of patients became ventilator-dependent. In a prospective international observational study of 268 untreated adults,Reference Güngör, de Vries, Hop, Reuser, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 19 the median age at diagnosis was 38 years of age and median survival after diagnosis 27 years.

Respiratory insufficiency is a cardinal feature of LOPD and the primary cause of mortality. Symptoms include exertion-induced dyspnea, weak cough, frequent episodes of aspiration (particularly with bulbar involvement) and respiratory infections. Sleep-disordered breathing, characterized by hypoventilation or obstructive sleep apnoea, is commonReference Mellies, Ragette, Schwake, Baethmann, Voit and Teschler 51 , Reference Margolis, Howlett, Goldberg, Eftychiadis and Levine 52 and may be associated with frequent awakenings, nightmares, nocturia, night sweats, morning headache and excessive daytime sleepiness. Nocturnal hypoventilation becomes sustained over time with a decline in vital capacity (VC).Reference Mellies, Ragette, Schwake, Baethmann, Voit and Teschler 51 Moderate-to-severe diaphragmatic impairment is suggested by the occurrence of unexplained orthopnea and/or paradoxical thoraco-abdominal motion while breathing in the supine posture (e.g., inward movement of the abdomen during inspiration), and dyspnea 53 when bending over or after immersion into water.Reference McCool and Tzelepis 54

Respiratory deterioration is related to disease duration rather than to age at presentation.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, Hop, Reuser, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 15 , Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 In most patients with LOPD, symptoms of limb muscle weakness are likely to occur before respiratory symptoms.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, Hop, Reuser, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 15 , Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 This is due to the inherently large reserve of the respiratory system and because patients may reduce their level of physical activity, and hence ventilatory demands, as the disease progresses. Patients with major peripheral muscle weakness are likely to have significant impairment of respiratory function, but the converse is not necessarily true, given that some patients require respiratory support with mechanical ventilation while still ambulatory.Reference Pellegrini, Laforêt, Orlikowski, Pellegrini, Caillaud, Eymard and Raphael 56

As noted with other neuromuscular disorders, respiratory impairment in Pompe disease is indicative of a predominantly restrictive abnormality. The rate of decline in VC over time is variable—ranging from 0.9 to 4.6% per year,Reference van der Beek, Hagemans, Reuser, Hop, van der Ploeg and van Doorn 18 , Reference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24 , Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 and the presence of scoliosis may be contributing factor.Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 , Reference Roberts, Kishnani, van der Ploeg, Müller-Felber, Merlini and Prasad 57 Studies have shown that VC declines more rapidly in males than in females regardless of age, disease duration, scoliosis, muscle strength and mobility.Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 Deterioration of expiratory muscle function and the decreased effectiveness of cough, which has also been noted in Pompe disease,Reference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24 , Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 predispose patients to recurrent pulmonary infections.

Management

In general, the monitoring of patients with Pompe disease requires a coordinated approach by a specialist and individuals who have expertise in the care of these patients. Management of care is often coordinated by a neuromuscular physician, neurologist or metabolic disease specialist. Healthcare providers that have expertise in such disciplines as respiratory medicine, cardiology, bone health, nutrition, speech and language, occupational therapy, physical therapy, social work, psychology, community work, and palliative care physicians form an integral part of the circle of care.Reference Kishnani, Steiner, Bali, Berger, Byrne and Case 1 , Reference Cupler, Berger, Leshner, Wolfe, Han and Barohn 58 The health of patients with Pompe disease can also be affected by issues not directly related to glycogen storage: osteopeniaReference van den Berg, Zandbergen, van Capelle, de Vries, Hop and van den Hout 59 and risk from procedures with certain general anaesthetics leading to both cardiac and respiratory complications.Reference Ing, Cook, Bengur, Williams, Eck and Dear Gde 60 , Reference Wang, Ross, Li, Dearmey, Mackey and Worden 61

Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) is the only established drug therapy for patients with Pompe disease that targets the enzyme deficiency. Recombinant human acid alpha-glucosidase (rhGAA; alglucosidase alfa; Myozyme®) is the only approved ERT currently in Canada and is administered as an intravenous infusion every two weeks. A change in the production process to a larger batch size from 160 to 2000 litres and later to 4000 litres has resulted in the same enzyme product from the larger batch size, alglucosidase alfa, being named Lumizyme® in the United States only. Outside the United States, alglucosidase alfa is named Myozyme® regardless of batch size. Other formulations of ERT are in various stages of clinical development. Although ERT is not curative, it is the only treatment that has been shown to modify the disease course in patients with Pompe disease.Reference Prater, Banugaria, Dearmey, Botha, Stege and Case 62 - Reference Gungor, Kruijshaar, Plug, D’Agostino, Hagemans and van Doorn 64 The most significant factor that can influence the bioavailability of recombinant enzyme is the development of anti-GAA neutralizing antibodies that occur after the start of ERT. In cases of infantile Pompe disease, the probability of developing high titres of anti-GAA antibodies is primarily affected by their CRIM status (cross-reactive immunologic material).

Infantile-Onset Pompe Disease

Cardiac Function

Treatment of Pompe cardiomyopathy is directed by symptomatology. Consultation with a cardiologist is helpful in outlining an appropriate treatment approach. Severe ventricular hypertrophy with concomitant left ventricular outflow tract obstruction is managed with beta blockade and careful manipulation of fluid status. Avoidance of dehydration or hypotension is important, as this may precipitate ventricular arrhythmia and cardiovascular collapse. Systolic function is often hyperdynamic and well preserved initially. Inotropic medications and afterload reduction may worsen outflow tract obstruction and should only be used in the setting of congestive heart failure. Supraventricular tachyarrhythmias may be controlled with beta blockade. Careful monitoring for ventricular ectopy is warranted both prior to initiation of ERT and during treatment.Reference Chen, Chen, Chiu, Chien, Lee and Lin 11

Respiratory Function

Infants and children with Pompe disease are vulnerable to worsening respiratory disease due to muscle weakness, leading to hypoventilation and sleep-disordered breathing. This is compounded by the risk of aspiration and decreased reserve from concurrent cardiac disease. Baseline assessment by spirometry and consideration of non-invasive respiratory support is warranted in all children with a new diagnosis of Pompe disease.Reference Kansagra, Austin, DeArmey, Kishnani and Kravitz 65

Other Parameters

In patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease who receive intervention and therefore survive infancy, there is a high prevalence of weakness involving oropharyngeal muscles, which can lead to difficulties with speech and swallowing.Reference van Gelder, van Capelle, Ebbink, Ebbink, Moor-van Nugteren and van den Hout 66 For this reason, assessment of swallowing and speech is critical at the time of diagnosis and at interval follow-up in patients to allow early identification and treatment of any problems.

Enzyme Replacement Therapy

Given the rare incidence of infantile Pompe disease, there are only a few studies documenting the efficacy of ERT in these patients. In a pivotal open-label trial in 18 patients with infantile Pompe disease receiving rhGAA for 52 weeks,Reference Kishnani, Corzo, Leslie, Gruskin, van der Ploeg and Clancy 67 all survived to 1 year of age,Reference Kishnani, Corzo, Leslie, Gruskin, van der Ploeg and Clancy 67 16 survived to be recruited into a 3-year extension study, 89% survived to 2 years of age, and 39% reached 36 months of age. This compares to a natural history studyReference Kishnani, Hwu, Mandel, Nicolino, Yong and Corzo 5 showing survival at 18 months of only 12.3% and ventilator-free survival of only 6.7%. In these trials, a dose of 20 mg/kg versus 40 mg/kg of rhGAA was used, with no superiority of response to the higher dose. Cardiac muscle responds well to ERT, particularly in asymptomatic patients. A retrospective studyReference Prater, Banugaria, Dearmey, Botha, Stege and Case 62 of 11 long-term survivors with infantile-onset Pompe disease (5.4-12 years of age) who began receiving ERT at ≤6 months of age showed that all patients displayed improvements in cardiac variables and gross motor function. In an analysis of 14 infants with Pompe disease,Reference Chen, Chen, Chiu, Chien, Lee and Lin 11 administration of ERT <5 months or ≥5 months after birth partially restored cardiac function in both symptomatic and symptom-free patients, with a less predictable benefit in infants beginning ERT at ≥5 months of age.

Left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy shows significant regression as early as two months after initiation of ERT but may not resolve completely in infants started after five months of age, or those with marked increases in LV mass index.Reference Chen, Chen, Chiu, Chien, Lee and Lin 11 The normalization of LV mass index has been shown to be persistent in long-term survivors on ERT.Reference Prater, Banugaria, DeArmey, Botha, Stege and Case 12 In the first two months of treatment, there is a transient decrease in LV ejection fraction that typically returns to baseline by six months of treatment.Reference Chen, Chien, Hwu, Lee, Wang and Chen 68 Similarly, the short PR interval and elevated QRS voltages resolve with ERT. In four patients with LV outflow tract obstruction treated with beta blockers, the obstruction resolved after one month of ERT.Reference Chen, Chien, Hwu, Lee, Wang and Chen 68 Despite the improvement in cardiac hypertrophy, there continues to be an increased risk of conduction abnormalities and tachyarrhythmias long-term.Reference Chen, Chen, Chiu, Chien, Lee and Lin 11

CRIM Status

Among patients with Pompe disease, cross-reactive immunologic material (CRIM) status is an important predictor of response to ERT,Reference Bali, Goldstein, Banugaria, Dai, Mackey and Rehder 69 In patients who are identified as having negative CRIM status (CRIM), no GAA protein is synthesized because of the presence of null GAA alleles. Thus, rhGAA is recognized as a foreign protein by the immune system in these patients, resulting in the development of high neutralizing antibody titres that render ERT ineffective.Reference Banugaria, Prater, Ng, Kobori, Finkel and Ladda 70 In a retrospective studyReference Kishnani, Goldenberg, DeArmey, Heller, Benjamin and Young 71 of CRIM+ and CRIM patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease receiving rhGAA, after 1 year of treatment, 4.8% of CRIM+ and 54.5% of CRIM patients were deceased. Worse cardiac and gross motor function in CRIM patients predicted poor ventilator-free survival. In addition, CRIM patients developed antibodies at a faster rate and had higher antibody titres than CRIM+ patients.Reference Kishnani, Goldenberg, DeArmey, Heller, Benjamin and Young 71 In another retrospective analysis of infants with Pompe disease,Reference Banugaria, Prater, Ng, Kobori, Finkel and Ladda 70 clinical outcomes in the high-titre CRIM+ group relative to the low-titre CRIM+ group were poor across all areas evaluated. Interestingly, no significant differences were observed for outcomes in the CRIM and high-titre CRIM+ groups.Reference Banugaria, Prater, Ng, Kobori, Finkel and Ladda 70

A mutation analysis study of 243 patients with infantile-onset Pompe diseaseReference Bali, Goldstein, Banugaria, Dai, Mackey and Rehder 69 showed that 25.1% were identified as being CRIM. Most CRIM patients were either homozygous or compound heterozygotes for nonsense and/or frame-shift mutations, resulting in premature stop codons or multi-exon deletions, and 1 CRIM patient was homozygous for a point mutation that abolished the initiator methionine (and no other missense mutations were identified). In contrast, most of the CRIM+ patients had 1 or 2 missense or in-frame deletion mutations that predicted the synthesis of some GAA protein.

Immune Tolerance Induction (ITI)

To counteract the development of neutralizing antibodies to rhGAA, several agents that can potentially mitigate the immune response to ERT (e.g., promote immune tolerance) are under investigation. The immune-modulating protocols can involve a combination of rituximab, methotrexate, and support with gamma globulins during the period of induced immunocompromise. In small case series, some patients have responded with reduction of anti-GAA titres after the use of ITI or have failed to develop high antibody titres when treated with ITI prior to commencement of ERT. There is growing evidence that high antibody titres in cases of infantile Pompe disease are highly predictive of a failure of response to ERT and that ITI can improve the response to ERT.Reference Messinger, Mendelsohn, Rhead, Dimmock, Hershkovitz and Champion 72 - Reference Banugaria, Prater, Patel, Dearmey, Milleson and Sheets 74 At this time, ITI is an investigational therapy used in the context of clinical trials and ongoing studies. While ITI is currently not considered part of standard clinical care in infantile-onset Pompe disease, there is strong evidence that ignoring the contribution of CRIM status can lead to a failure of therapy with ERT. Therefore, the management of these infants should only be initiated after consultation with a medical centre with expertise in paediatric care and who can provide access to CRIM testing and counsel families whether a clinical trial involving ITI may need to be considered before starting ERT.

Nutrition

Although there is no specific study on the nutrient intakes of infants with Pompe disease, poor tone, swallowing capacity, dysphagia and gastroesophageal reflux can impact nutritional intake. Jones and colleaguesReference Jones, Muller, Lin, Banugaria, Case and Li 8 studied 13 infants, and all had swallowing dysfunction. Regular swallowing assessment should be included as part of the follow-up protocol for all infants.Reference van Gelder, van Capelle, Ebbink, Ebbink, Moor-van Nugteren and van den Hout 66 Infants should be monitored by a nutritionist to ensure that they meet the dietary reference intakes (DRI).Reference Moggio, Colombo, Peverelli, Villa, Xhani and Testolin 75 For infants at high risk of aspiration and for those who display a suboptimal growth rate, insertion of a gastrostomy tube and enteral feeding should be considered.

Management Guidelines

  1. 1. Patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease should be offered enzyme replacement therapy at a dose of 20 mg/kg every other week. Quality of evidence: Grade A.

  2. 2. Prior to commencement of ERT, it is important to determine CRIM status and whether a clinical trial of ITI should be part of the treatment plan. The child should be assessed in a paediatric centre with expertise in managing infants with Pompe disease. Quality of evidence: Grade B.

  3. 3. Following diagnosis and in conjunction with starting ERT, patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease should undergo respiratory assessment and non-invasive respiratory support provided where appropriate. Quality of evidence: Grade B.

  4. 4. Infants should be evaluated for swallowing difficulties, and methods to promote sufficient intake to provide adequate growth should be used. Quality of evidence: Grade C.

Late-Onset Pompe Disease

Enzyme Replacement Therapy

The strongest evidence for the benefits of ERT in late-onset Pompe disease comes from a randomized, placebo-controlled, prospective trial of rhGAA,Reference van der Ploeg, Clemens, Corzo, Escolar, Florence, Groeneveld and Herson 63 in which 90 patients aged ≥8 years were randomly assigned to receive treatment with either rhGAA or placebo, every 2 weeks for 78 weeks. These were ambulatory patients with the exclusion of patients that needed either invasive mechanical ventilation or non-invasive ventilation while awake. Subjects on active treatment showed significant improvements in forced vital capacity (FVC) and 6-minute walk test (6MWT) distance compared with patients who received placebo. A subgroup analysis of patients with less severe clinical disease (baseline 6MWT distance ≥300 metres and FVC ≥55% of predicted values) showed better outcomes.Reference van der Ploeg, Clemens, Corzo, Escolar, Florence, Groeneveld and Herson 63 Observational and open-label cohort studies of ERTReference Regnery, Kornblum, Hanisch, Vielhaber, Strigl-Pill and Grunert 76 - Reference Strothotte, Strigl-Pill, Grunert, Kornblum, Eger and Wessig 82 corroborate the findings noted in the randomized trial. Predictors of response to ERT noted in an open-label prospective studyReference de Vries, van der Beek, Hop, Karstens, Wokke and de Visser 83 of 69 patients who received ERT for up to 23 months were: female sex, younger age and less severe disease. Female sex was associated with improvements in muscle strength after ERT; younger age and less severe disease predicted a better supine FVC response.Reference de Vries, van der Beek, Hop, Karstens, Wokke and de Visser 83 Improvements in muscle function were noted in patients with mild or moderate muscle weakness who were not wheelchair-dependent but not in patients with severe muscle weakness who were wheelchair-bound.Reference de Vries, van der Beek, Hop, Karstens, Wokke and de Visser 83 Notably, 2 of 27 patients who used walking aids at the time of ERT initiation could walk without assistance following ERT.Reference de Vries, van der Beek, Hop, Karstens, Wokke and de Visser 83 In general agreement with the aforementioned outcomes, a recently published literature reviewReference Toscano and Schoser 79 reported stabilization of motor and respiratory function as well as improvements in QoL in patients who received ERT. An increasing number of patients are receiving their ERT in their own home through home infusion programs. In Canada in 2016, approximately 30% of patients with late-onset Pompe disease have home enzyme infusions and this number is expected to rise (data from Genzyme Canada, a Sanofi company).

Results from a cross-sectional survey of 124 adult patients with Pompe diseaseReference Gungor, Schober, Kruijshaar, Plug, Karabul and Deschauer 84 showed that 84% of patients experienced pain in multiple sites, including the back, shoulders and upper leg/thigh regions. In another study of 225 adult patients,Reference Hagemans, van Schie, Janssens, van Doorn, Reuser and van der Ploeg 85 78% reported pronounced levels of fatigue (e.g., scores ≥4 on the Fatigue Severity Scale). Both pain and fatigue were reported to have an adverse effect on mood, performance of daily activities, sleep, and ability to enjoy life.Reference Gungor, Schober, Kruijshaar, Plug, Karabul and Deschauer 84 , Reference Gungor, de Vries, Brusse, Kruijshaar, Hop and Murawska 86 Although the effects of ERT on pain have not been elucidated, improvements in fatigue and depression scores were observed in patients on long-term ERT.Reference Gungor, de Vries, Brusse, Kruijshaar, Hop and Murawska 86 Some comparisons have been made using higher doses of rhGAA,Reference Case, Bjartmar, Morgan, Casey, Charrow and Clancy 87 but overall, clinical trials showing a clear benefit using higher doses of rhGAA over the standard dose of 20 mg/kg every other week are lacking.

Overall, these data indicate that early initiation of ERT in patients with less-advanced disease improves outcomes. ERT has less of an impact in patients with advanced disease who are wheelchair-bound or are receiving mechanical ventilation support at treatment initiation. There are no randomized, placebo-controlled trials in such patients, and data comes from observational studies. It is nonetheless clear that patients who are not yet at the stage of requiring mechanical ventilation are more likely to benefit from ERT compared to patients with more severe disease. Nevertheless, patients enrolled in these clinical trials who showed a response to ERT had some degree of respiratory insufficiency or functional impairment. There is no evidence to show that non-symptomatic LOPD patients (who may have been found to have low acid alpha-glucosidase activity or a DNA mutation through family testing or as an incidental finding) will benefit from ERT. There are also no trials showing that patients who just have an elevation in serum creatine kinase without clinical signs and symptoms benefit from ERT. The general consensus of the authors is that patients with LOPD be considered for ERT only when there are symptoms related to a disease-specific impairment such as pulmonary function or motor weakness. It is reasonable in non-symptomatic patients to monitor their function to see if symptoms develop after a diagnosis is made before considering ERT.

It is clear from the above discussion that not all patients will benefit from ERT. If a patient with LOPD is being considered for ERT, it is important to define the outcome parameters that ERT is intended to target prior to starting therapy. A discussion should be held with the patient about these outcome parameters so that the patient is aware that ERT may be discontinued if the patient does not respond to the therapy. There have been guidelines developed that address criteria for cessation of ERT,Reference Schoser, Laforêt, Kruijshaar, Toscano, van Doorn and van der Ploeg 88 , Reference Hundsberger, Rohrbach, Kern and Rosler 89 but these criteria will vary among jurisdictions. In general terms, patients in whom respiratory dysfunction and/or skeletal myopathy continue to progress at the same rate despite the introduction of ERT should be considered candidates for cessation of therapy. Also, patients experiencing severe allergic reactions not amenable to standard therapy, a severe comorbid condition limiting lifespan, and noncompliance with infusions and recommended assessments are also indications to consider cessation of therapy in most of the jurisdictions of Canada.

High Sustained Antibody Titres (HSATs) in Late-Onset Pompe Disease

Given the correlation between HSATs in CRIM patients and a poor response to ERT in infantile-onset Pompe disease,Reference Banugaria, Prater, Ng, Kobori, Finkel and Ladda 70 , Reference Kishnani, Goldenberg, DeArmey, Heller, Benjamin and Young 71 a retrospective reviewReference Patel, Banugaria, Case, Wenninger, Schoser and Kishnani 90 revealed a similar correlation in patients with late-onset Pompe disease. After ≥6 months of ERT, 3 of the 6 patients with HSAT (≥1:51,200) developed HSAT that corresponded with a decline in pulmonary function, QoL and motor function.Reference Patel, Banugaria, Case, Wenninger, Schoser and Kishnani 90 Similarly, in a case report of a patient with LOPD,Reference de Vries, van der Beek, Kroos, Ozkan, van Doorn and Richards 91 the antibody titre rose to a high level following ERT, and the patient’s disease progressed. Immunologic assays showed that approximately 40% of the administered rhGAA was captured by circulating antibodies and that GAA uptake by cultured fibroblasts was inhibited by admixture of the patient’s serum.Reference de Vries, van der Beek, Kroos, Ozkan, van Doorn and Richards 91 It should be noted that elevations in antibody titre after ERT are not always detrimental, as noted in a case study of a 37-year-old woman with late-onset Pompe disease.Reference Papadopoulos, Papadimas, Spengos and Manta 92 The patient was seropositive at baseline, and antibody titres rapidly increased as early as 12 weeks of therapy. However, the antibodies neither inhibited GAA enzymatic activity in the patient’s serum nor interfered with uptake of rhGAA by cultured human fibroblasts.Reference Papadopoulos, Papadimas, Spengos and Manta 92 The evidence at present does not suggest routine evaluation of CRIM status in LOPD patients, but baseline antibody status prior to initiation of ERT may prove useful to detect a rise in antibody titres if needed at a later date. It is not clear whether routine measurement of HSAT is necessary after starting ERT. In a patient who has an initial benefit from ERT but is found to show declines at a later date, measurement of HSAT is warranted. The management of patients with HSAT may require enrolling in a clinical trial protocol. Finally, there have been rare cases of IgE-mediated allergic reactions to ERT,Reference El-Gharbawy, Mackey, DeArmey, Westby, Grinnell and Malovrh 93 and these patients should be assessed by an allergist/immunologist for determination of strategies to mitigate the allergic response.

Management Guideline

  1. 1. A trial of enzyme replacement therapy should be offered to patients with late-onset Pompe disease at a dose of 20 mg/kg body weight every other week who demonstrate clinical signs and symptoms of the disease, are ambulatory, and are either non-ventilated or on non-invasive ventilation when asleep. Quality of evidence: Grade B.

  2. 2. A trial of enzyme replacement therapy may be considered in individuals with late-onset Pompe disease at a dose of 20 mg/kg every other week who are non-ambulatory and/or receive non-invasive ventilation while awake or invasive ventilation if there are predefined skeletal muscle outcomes which can be evaluated and which, if achieved, would improve the functional status of the patient. In such cases, if the trial of therapy does not result in the pre-specified outcomes, then the trial should be discontinued.

Nutrition

Nutritional intake should meet the age-appropriate energy and nutrient needs of individuals based on the Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI). Insufficient protein and calories can lead to low muscle mass. Patients with any progressive neuromuscular disease tend to be less physically active and expend less energy than active individuals. Dysphagia is present in approximately 25% of patients with LOPD, making it challenging to eat.Reference Jones, Muller, Lin, Banugaria, Case and Li 8 , Reference Motlagh, MacDonald and Tarnopolsky 94 The effects of added protein or modified diets in LOPD has been limited to case study reports and small trials.Reference Isaacs, Savage, Badenhorst and Whistler 95 - Reference Slonim, Bulone, Goldberg, Minikes, Slonim and Galanko 101 In general, giving adequate calories and up to 30% of energy intake as protein seemed to preserve muscle mass, protein turnover and respiratory function.Reference Slonim, Coleman, McElligot, Najjar, Hirschhorn and Labadie 97 , Reference Slonim, Bulone, Goldberg, Minikes, Slonim and Galanko 101 Experience from other neuromuscular diseases suggest that those patients may benefit from a higher protein intake.Reference Papadopoulos, Papadimas, Spengos and Manta 92 , Reference Slonim, Bulone, Goldberg, Minikes, Slonim and Galanko 101 - Reference Pascual and Roe 103 Aside from protein and energy, there have been almost no data on whether patients with LOPD have micronutrient deficiencies (vitamins and minerals). The role of vitamin D in muscle and bone health has been studied in a number of different patient groups but not specifically in Pompe disease. However, patients with Pompe disease are at risk for osteopenia and fractures, and this vulnerability appears to be higher if they are not weight-bearing and have muscle atrophy.Reference van den Berg, Zandbergen, van Capelle, de Vries, Hop and van den Hout 59 , Reference Khan, Weinstein, Hanley, Casey, McNeil and Ramage 104 Recommendations for vitamin D intake range from an acceptable allowance (AI) of 400 IU per day in infants, a recommended dietary allowance (RDA) of 600 IU per day between 1 and 70 years of age, and 800 IU per day for patients 71 years of age and older.Reference Ross, Manson, Abrams, Aloia, Brannon and Clinton 105 In reality, vitamin D supplementation is required for most Canadian patients to achieve a recommended blood level of greater than 75 nmol/L.Reference Langlois, Greene-Finestone, Little, Hidiroglou and Whiting 106 - Reference Holick, Binkley, Bischoff-Ferrari, Gordon, Hanley and Heaney 109 For adult patients, this usually translates to an additional vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) supplement of between 1000 and 2000 IU per day. Overall, nutrition in patients with Pompe disease should be optimized.

Respiratory Function

Vital capacity remains the best overall indicator of functional impairment and prognosis in LOPD. A postural drop in VC of more than 25% from the sitting to the supine position has been identified as an indicator of diaphragmatic weakness with high sensitivity (79%) and specificity (90%) in various neuromuscular diseases.Reference Fromageot, Lofaso, Annane, Falaize, Lejaille and Clair 110 , Reference Mier-Jedrzejowicz, Brophy, Moxham and Green 111 Patients showing the largest drops in VC demonstrate more severe hypoventilation and haemoglobin desaturation during sleep.Reference Mellies, Ragette, Schwake, Baethmann, Voit and Teschler 51 Supine VC measurements have been shown to decline more rapidly.Reference Wokke, Escolar, Pestronk, Jaffe, Carter and van den Berg 24 , Reference van der Beek, van Capelle, van der Velden-van Etten, Etten, Hop and van den Berg 55 , Reference Prigent, Orlikowski, Laforêt, Letilly, Falaize and Pellegrini 112 Pompe disease patients experience the greatest drops in VC from the seated to the supine position. In general, an upright VC value that is <60% of the predicted value identifies neuromuscular patients at risk for sleep-disordered breathing, while an upright VC <40% of the predicted value indicates an increased risk for sustained nocturnal hypercapnia.Reference Ragette, Mellies, Schwake, Voit and Teschler 113 An upright inspiratory VC of <40% of the predicted value was strongly (sensitivity 80%, specificity 93%) associated with nocturnal hypoventilation in adult Pompe disease patients.Reference Mellies, Ragette, Schwake, Baethmann, Voit and Teschler 51

Maximum inspiratory pressure (MIP) measurements are generally more sensitive than VC for detecting inspiratory muscle weakness, but low values are often related to technical factors and do not necessarily indicate true weakness. Maximal sniff nasal pressure (SNIP) involves measurement of the pressure generated within an occluded nostril during a maximal sniff maneuver.Reference Heritier, Rahm, Pasche and Fitting 114 In the setting of an equivocally low MIP value or an inability to perform the MIP manoeuvre (e.g., because of bulbar muscle weakness), use of SNIP may be helpful. Although SNIP may be easier to perform, and has a better correlation to VC values than MIP in some neuromuscular diseases,Reference Stefanutti, Benoist, Scheinmann, Chaussain and Fitting 115 this was not shown to be the case in Pompe disease.Reference Prigent, Orlikowski, Laforêt, Letilly, Falaize and Pellegrini 112

Reductions in coughing effectiveness that are secondary to bulbar dysfunction or respiratory muscle weakness increase patients’ susceptibility to potentially fatal respiratory tract infections.Reference Szeinberg, Tabachnik, Rashed, McLaughlin, England and Bryan 116 The lowest value of maximum expiratory pressure (MEP) that was consistent with production of a satisfactory cough was in the range of 50-60 cm H2O;Reference Szeinberg, Tabachnik, Rashed, McLaughlin, England and Bryan 116 peak cough flow (PCF) values below 4.25 L/sec can also identify patients at risk for complications related to impaired clearance of pulmonary airway secretions.Reference Bach, Ishikawa and Kim 117 , Reference Sancho, Servera, Díaz and Marin 118

Patients with late-onset Pompe disease should be monitored for the development of respiratory complications and undergo regular pulmonary function tests every 6 to 12 months. Evaluations of forced expiratory and inspiratory VC should be chosen on the basis of the higher of the two measurements.Reference Miller, Hankinson, Brusasco, Burgos, Casaburi and Coates 119 Patients and their caregivers should be instructed on appropriate pulmonary airway clearance measures, which might include lung volume recruitment (e.g., breath stacking), manually assisted coughing techniques and the use of a mechanical in-exsufflator device.Reference McKim, Road, Avendano, Abdool, Cote and Duguid 120 Peak cough flow (PCF) measurements should be included in the routine pulmonary assessment of patients with Pompe disease. Supine VC measurements may be useful in some patients, particularly those in whom upright VC is normal, to detect early pulmonary involvement. However, once the diagnosis of respiratory muscle weakness is established, upright VC values can be used to follow disease progression, and the addition of supine measurements is generally not required.

Sleep and Nocturnal Ventilation

Sleep evaluation should generally be performed when the upright VC is <60% of the predicted value or earlier if there is clinical evidence of diaphragmatic weakness (e.g., orthopnea, thoraco-abdominal paradox) or symptoms consistent with sleep-disordered breathing. Although complete polysomnography with CO2 monitoring is preferred to distinguish upper airway obstructive events from hypoventilation and to confirm the occurrence of REM sleep, these techniques may not be readily available and may be burdensome for some patients. In such instances, alternative forms of respiratory monitoring during sleep that ideally include both oximetry and CO2 measurements can be implemented.

Correction of nocturnal hypoventilation with non-invasive ventilator support in neuromuscular patients improves blood gas values not only during sleep but also during the daytime while awake and breathing without ventilatory assistance,Reference Simonds, Muntoni, Heather and Fielding 121 and these findings have been confirmed in Pompe disease patients.Reference Mellies, Stehling, Dohna-Schwake, Ragette, Teschler and Voit 122 This appears to be related to reversal of impaired ventilatory drive rather than changes in respiratory muscle properties or pulmonary function.Reference Annane, Quera-Salva, Lofaso, Vercken, Lesieur and Fromageot 123 Although the optimal timing for initiation of nocturnal ventilation and extending ventilatory support to the daytime has not been established in adults with Pompe disease, data from studies of other neuromuscular disordersReference Ward, Chatwin, Heather and Simonds 124 suggest that a major deterioration in respiratory status occurs if nocturnal non-invasive ventilation is not instituted within one to two years after the onset of nocturnal hypoventilation. Both volume- and pressure-cycled ventilation assist devices have been successfully used.Reference Chadda, Clair, Orlikowski, Macadoux, Raphael and Lofaso 125 If extension of ventilation assistance into the daytime is necessary for symptom relief or due to the presence of diurnal hypercapnia, intermittent mouthpiece ventilation should be considered as an alternative to invasive tracheostomy.Reference Toussaint, Steens, Wasteels and Soudon 126

Management Guideline

  1. 1. Patients with late-onset Pompe disease should be monitored for the development of respiratory complications using pulmonary function tests at regular intervals. Quality of evidence: Grade B.

Exercise

Disuse atrophy and muscle weakness are universal in Pompe diseaseReference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16 and can have a significant impact on muscle function and QoL. Resistance exercise may enhance mitochondrial capacity and lower oxidative stress.Reference Parise, Phillips, Kaczor and Tarnopolsky 48 It has been suggested that endurance exercise during ERT may enhance GAA uptake by the working muscle by increasing blood flow,Reference Strothotte, Strigl-Pill, Grunert, Kornblum, Eger and Wessig 82 but evidence from a mouse model revealed no independent or synergistic effects of endurance exercise on GAA activity or glycogen clearance in skeletal or cardiac muscle tissues.Reference Nilsson, Samjoo, Hettinga, Koeberl, Zhang and Hawke 127 However, improvements in running speed, endurance, balance and manual dexterity were noted in GAA-deficient mice that received exercise therapy alone or exercise plus ERT.Reference Nilsson, Samjoo, Hettinga, Koeberl, Zhang and Hawke 127

The effects of exercise on muscle strength and performance in patients with Pompe disease has been limited to small-scale, uncontrolled, prospective studies.Reference Slonim, Bulone, Goldberg, Minikes, Slonim and Galanko 101 , Reference Terzis, Dimopoulos, Papadimas, Papadopoulos, Spengos and Fatouros 128 - Reference Burns, Rohrich and Chung 130 Terzis and colleaguesReference Terzis, Dimopoulos, Papadimas, Papadopoulos, Spengos and Fatouros 128 used a progressive resistance exercise program for 20 weeks in 5 patients with Pompe disease who had received ERT for a year. Improvements in muscle strength were noted along with a significant increase in arm fat-free mass. Importantly, an increase in 6MWT distance was associated with a strong statistical relationship between hip extension strength and performance of the 6MWT.Reference Terzis, Dimopoulos, Papadimas, Papadopoulos, Spengos and Fatouros 128 Despite inclusion of an endurance training component, strength outcomes likely resulted from the resistance exercise aspect.Reference Tarnopolsky, Zimmer, Paikin, Safdar, Aboud and Pearce 131 In another study,Reference Terzis, Krase, Papadimas, Papadopoulos, Kavouras and Manta 129 implementation of endurance exercise in five patients with Pompe disease who received ERT did not appear to improve muscle function. Because evaluation of 6MWT and muscle strength in this study occurred after several months of both ERT and exercise, the true effect of exercise could not be determined. Slonim and colleaguesReference Slonim, Bulone, Goldberg, Minikes, Slonim and Galanko 101 examined the potential benefit of endurance exercise in combination with a low-carbohydrate/ high-protein diet in 34 patients with Pompe disease over a 2- to 10-year period. In patients who complied with therapy, the Walton and Gardner-Medwin Scale motor function scores had either improved or reached a plateau.Reference Slonim, Bulone, Goldberg, Minikes, Slonim and Galanko 101 However, it is difficult to ascertain whether the benefits in the latter study could be attributed to exercise and/or the nutritional intervention. Exercise may also be useful for pulmonary involvement in that respiratory muscle strength training was shown to improve inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength in two patients with Pompe diseaseReference Jones, Moss, Edwards and Kishnani 132 who were also treated with ERT. Overall, data from clinical studies and animal models suggest a possible benefit of endurance and resistance exercise in patients with Pompe disease that is independent of reducing muscle glycogen storage.

In a questionnaire-based assessment of untreated adult patients with Pompe disease,Reference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16 complaints pertaining to motor function were mostly related to mobility problems and limb-girdle weakness. Rising from a chair, climbing stairs and changing to an upright position after bending were either difficult or impossible for more than two-thirds of respondents; 76% were troubled by fatigue and 46% were bothered by pain.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16 Although evidence regarding the potential benefits of exercise in Pompe disease is limited, a review of exercise in neuromuscular diseases, including Pompe disease,Reference Anziska and Sternberg 133 and previously published Pompe disease management guidelinesReference Kishnani, Steiner, Bali, Berger, Byrne and Case 1 suggest that low-impact or submaximal aerobic exercise, targeted training of specific muscles and exercises that improve balance may be prescribed. Exercise must be tailored to the patient’s level of ability; however, the patient may be required to exercise beyond his or her level of perceived tolerance to obtain a benefit. There is no evidence to suggest that systematic activity restriction in Pompe disease is warranted.

Functional Capacity, Fatigue and Quality of Life

Compared with the general population, patients with late-onset Pompe disease reported significantly lower QoL values on physical functioning, general health, vitality, and social functioning scales.Reference Hagemans, Janssens, Winkel, Sieradzan, Reuser and van Doorn 134 There are a multitude of functional scales for Pompe disease. In an assessment of disability and participation in daily life activities in 257 adult patients with late-onset Pompe disease using the Rotterdam Handicap Score (RHS),Reference Hagemans, Laforêt, Hop, Merkies, van Doorn and Reuser 135 individual item scores were lowest for domestic tasks and work/study. The mean RHS score differed significantly between patients with and without respiratory support and patients with and without a wheelchair. Fatigue is a prominent feature among patients with late-onset Pompe disease. In an assessment of 225 adults with late-onset Pompe disease, 67% of patients had Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) scores >5, indicative of severe fatigue, and markedly higher than those for healthy controls.Reference Hagemans, van Schie, Janssens, van Doorn, Reuser and van der Ploeg 85 A normative profile of physical functioning (mobility and self-care) was developed using an expanded version of the Paediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI) for use in infants and in children up to 14 years of age.Reference Haley, Fragala and Skrinar 136 Twenty-four of the 26 children with late-onset Pompe disease were either at or below the third percentile for their age in mobility function.Reference Haley, Fragala and Skrinar 136 The 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF–36) has been extensively used as a semi-quantitative measure of health-related QoL in many neuromuscular diseases, including Pompe disease.Reference Hagemans, Janssens, Winkel, Sieradzan, Reuser and van Doorn 134 , Reference Laberge, Mathieu, Auclair, Gagnon, Noreau and Gagnon 137 , Reference Tieleman, Jenks, Kalkman, Borm and van Engelen 138 Patients with Pompe disease show marked reductions in SF–36 physical health domains but only marginal decreases in mental health domains.Reference Hagemans, Janssens, Winkel, Sieradzan, Reuser and van Doorn 134 More recently, the Rasch-built Pompe-specific Activity (R–PAct) scale was developed to better quantify the effects of Pompe disease on activities of daily living and social participation.Reference van der Beek, Hagemans, van der Ploeg, van Doorn and Merkies 139 The R–PAct scale consists of 18 items that best met the validity, reliability and responsiveness criteria throughout the spectrum of late-onset Pompe disease.Reference van der Beek, Hagemans, van der Ploeg, van Doorn and Merkies 139

From a practical standpoint, at a minimum during clinic visits, inquiries should be made about specific activities of daily living that reflect the underlying major aspects of the disease pathology (limb and respiratory weakness).Reference Hagemans, Hop, van Doorn, Reuser and van der Ploeg 23 Areas of inquiry should include difficulties associated with getting in and out of bed, meal preparation and eating, toileting, bathing, ambulation (level walking and climbing stairs) and falls, dressing, shortness of breath on exertion, orthopnea, morning headaches, sleep symptoms (e.g., apnoea, snoring, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea), muscle pain and fatigue, speech and swallowing difficulties, and heart palpitations.Reference Hagemans, Winkel, van Doorn, Hop, Loonen and Reuser 16

Biomarkers

Glucose tetrasaccharide (GLC4; Glcα1-6Glcα1-4Glcα1-4Glc) is a tetramer identified in the urineReference Manwaring, Prunty, Bainbridge, Burke, Finnegan and Franses 140 and recently applied in Pompe disease as a biomarker associated with skeletal muscle glycogen content.Reference Young, Zhang, Corzo, Thurberg, Bali and Kishnani 141 , Reference Young, Stevens, An, Chen and Millington 142 Higher levels of urine GLC4 are found in 94% of patients with Pompe disease.Reference Young, Piraud, Goldstein, Zhang, Rehder and Laforêt 143 However, there is a strong relationship with urinary GLC4 and age that must be considered when interpreting the results.Reference Young, Piraud, Goldstein, Zhang, Rehder and Laforêt 143 Urinary GLC4 is positively correlated with age in children under 1 year of age and negatively correlated with age in patients ≥18 years of age. There is no correlation with age between 1 and 18 years of age, but limited data.Reference Young, Piraud, Goldstein, Zhang, Rehder and Laforêt 143 In infantile patients, urinary GLC4 levels decrease within four weeks of treatment with rhGAA.Reference Young, Zhang, Corzo, Thurberg, Bali and Kishnani 141 Glucose tetrasaccharide is not specific to Pompe disease, and elevations in urine can also be seen in other types of genetic muscle diseases, trauma, acute pancreatitis and malignancies,Reference Young, Stevens, An, Chen and Millington 142 and can also be increased with pseudodeficiency alleles in the GAA gene.Reference Chien, Goldstein, Hwu, Smith, Lee and Chiang 144 There currently are no studies published that evaluate prospectively the specificity of GLC4 as a screening test when used to distinguish Pompe disease from other sources of elevation of this marker. GLC4 may be useful to monitor a biochemical response to ERT with consideration of age-specific norms, but there is currently insufficient data to evaluate its utility in relationship to a clinical response. This panel does not recommend the use of GLC4 as a diagnostic test.

Discontinuation of Enzyme Replacement Therapy (ERT)

Pompe disease is a progressive neuromuscular disorder. Therefore, if a patient is treated with ERT and their muscle strength and respiratory parameters remain stable over time, this is contrary to the natural history of the disease, and therapy should be continued even if no improvement in function is seen with initiation of ERT. It is important to document the rate of decline of skeletal and pulmonary function over time through patient history and review of past health records at the time that the diagnosis of Pompe disease is made. Treatment discontinuation may be considered if:

  1. a. Patients have severe infusion-related reactions that are not amenable to therapy and that compromise patient safety.

  2. b. Patients have an estimated life expectancy, either due to co-morbidities or advanced stages of decline from Pompe disease, that appears to be short and where the outcome is unlikely to be improved with continued use of ERT.

  3. c. Patients have a rate of decline in skeletal and/or pulmonary function after ERT initiation that is similar to that seen prior to the use of ERT.

In Canada, where the cost of the enzyme is provided largely by public healthcare, there are general requirements that patients maintain adherence to a certain frequency of enzyme infusions, supportive therapies and other aspects of medical monitoring of their disease in order to continue receiving enzyme replacement therapy. In certain cases, providers have stopped providing coverage for ERT if compliance becomes an issue. Sporadic or intermittent use of ERT is not justified.

Palliative Care

As in other severe neuromuscular disorders, patients with Pompe disease may evolve into a state of advanced respiratory insufficiency as well as severe disability, at which point many forms of treatment may become futile. When patients reach this stage, the medical team involved will offer treatments to relieve or prevent suffering and therefore improve quality of life. The goals of care should be discussed prior to start of treatment, periodically during the course of treatment, and when the goal does not involve aiding recovery from the disease. Palliative care teams can facilitate communication between families and medical teams to clarify treatment goals and make difficult medical decisions. They can also address issues related to grief, loss and bereavement, as well as provide expertise in the management of discomfort and end-of-life care.Reference Bushby, Finkel, Birnkrant, Case, Clemens and Cripe 145

Future Therapeutic Considerations

Although rhGAA remains the current targeted therapeutic option, there are pre-clinical and clinical trials involving potential new products. Two strategies involve modifications to the GAA molecule itself to enhance uptake.Reference Maga, Zhou, Kambampati, Peng, Wang and Bohnsack 146 , Reference Zhu, Li, Kyazike, Zhou, Thurberg and Raben 147 One method involves the addition of extra mannose-6-phosphate residues on the GAA protein to enhance mannose-6-phosphate-mediated cellular uptake (carbohydrate remodelling: oxime-neo-rhGAA).Reference Zhu, Li, Kyazike, Zhou, Thurberg and Raben 147 Although this strategy did enhance muscle uptake and glycogen clearance,Reference Zhu, Li, Kyazike, Zhou, Thurberg and Raben 147 we are not aware of any data from clinical trials using this type of product. Another strategy involved the creation of a fusion protein where GAA is linked to the insulin-like growth factor II to take advantage of the glycosylation-independent lysosomal targeting (GILT-tagged) to enhance muscle uptake.Reference Maga, Zhou, Kambampati, Peng, Wang and Bohnsack 146 A murine studyReference Maga, Zhou, Kambampati, Peng, Wang and Bohnsack 146 has shown that the GILT tag enhanced muscle uptake and glycogen clearance as compared with non-tagged GAA. There is currently a phase 3 trial of GILT-tagged GAA in LOPD (www.clinicaltrials.gov). A murine studyReference Koeberl, Luo, Sun, McVie-Wylie, Dai and Li 148 has shown that clenbuterol does enhance mannose-6-phosphate receptor expression in vivo and that this enhances muscle enzyme uptake and glycogen clearance. We are not aware of any clinical trials with this compound. Finally, studiesReference Khanna, Flanagan, Feng, Soska, Frascella and Pellegrino 149 have shown that the stability of the GAA enzyme in blood during infusions and the residual enzyme activity in muscle can be enhanced using the molecular chaperone AT2200 (1-deoxynojirimycin hydrochloride; duvoglustat hydrochloride). A phase 2 trial using AT2200 in LOPD patients was completed, but there are no published manuscripts as of the date of submission of the present manuscript.

Disclosures

These guidelines represent a consensus opinion of a pan-Canadian, multidisciplinary panel of healthcare professionals who are involved in the care of patients with Pompe disease. The concept of a working group to develop Canadian guidelines for the management of Pompe disease was initiated by members of the expert committee. The working group has been led by Dr. Aneal Khan. Financial contributions have been made by Genzyme Canada (Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) in the form of travel grants, and the authors have received honoraria as speakers and consultants, and some authors (AK) have received research grants from Genzyme. None of the authors have disclosed a financial interest in Genzyme. None of the authors have received financial remuneration for development of these guidelines. This document is not intended to be a comprehensive guide to the diagnosis and management of patients with Pompe disease but represents general guidelines based on evidence in the available published literature, which in the opinion of the authors can inform care providers about the needs of patients with Pompe. The authors have written the manuscript on their own without any input from Genzyme Canada or other service organizations, and the content of this document has been kept strictly confidential among the authors prior to its publication in the literature. MedLogix Communications LLC (Schaumburg, IL, USA) provided support for editing the document through an external contract funded by Genzyme Canada but has no affiliation with Genzyme Canada. The information contained in this document was obtained from a systematic review of the literature and the experience of the authors in their care of patients with Pompe disease.

Mark Tarnopolsky has the following disclosures: Genzyme, consultant, honoraria; Genzyme, grant recipient, grant, travel honoraria; Exerkine, CEO, ownership/stock.

Hans Katzberg has the following disclosures: Genzyme, consultant, advisor, speaker’s fee, travel support; Grifols, consultant, consultant fees, advisor, research grants; Flexpharma, consultant fee; CSL Behring, speaker fees, research grants, Octapharma, consultant.

Basil Petrof has the following disclosures: Genzyme, speaker, speaker’s fee; Sanofi, principal investigator, research support.

Sandra Sirrs has the following disclosures: Genzyme Canada, participation in conference with financial support for travel to conference; Shire HGT, support for attendance or educational conference.

Harvey Sarnat has nothing to disclose.

Kimberley Myers has nothing to disclose.

Nicolas Dupré has nothing to disclose.

Dubravka Dodig has the following disclosure: Sanofi-Genzyme, consultant/advisor, speaker’s fee.

Angela Genge has the following disclosures: Genzyme, principal investigator, grant; Novartis, principal investigator, grant; Biogen, principal investigator, grant; Bioblast, advisor, grant; Cytokinetics, principal investigator, grant; Alexion, principal investigator, grant; Allergan, advisor, grant; Pfizer, speaker’s bureau, speaker’s fee; Baxter, principal investigator, grant; CSL Behring, principal investigator, grant; Grifols, principal investigator, grant.

Shannon Venance has the following disclosure: Genzyme Canada, speaker’s bureau, speaker’s fees.

Lawrence Korngut has the following disclosure: Genzyme, grant recipient, grant and travel honoraria.

Julian Raiman has the following disclosures: Genzyme, grant recipient, honoraria and grant support; Biomarin, principal investigator, honoraria, grant; Shire, principal investigator, honoraria, grant; Altelion, grant recipient, honoraria and grant support.

Aneal Khan has the following disclosures: Genzyme, researcher, research grants; Genzyme, speaker, speaker’s fees and travel grants; Genzyme, consultant/ICGG Board, consulting fees and travel costs; Actelion, consultant, consulting fees; Actelion, speaker, travel grant; Actelion, researcher, speaker’s fees, research grants; Cytonet LLC, consultant, research grants; Cytonet LLC, speaker, travel grant; Cytonet LLC, researcher, speaker’s fees and consulting fees; Shire HGT, researcher, research grants; Shire HGT, speaker, speaker’s fees and travel awards; Alexion, consultant, consulting fees, travel awards and research grants; Biomarin, consultant, consulting fees; Biomarin, researcher, travel grants and research grants; Horizon, researcher, consulting fees; Horizon, consultant, travel grants and research grants.

References

1. Kishnani, PS, Steiner, RD, Bali, D, Berger, K, Byrne, BJ, Case, LE, et al. Pompe disease diagnosis and management guideline. Genet Med. 2006;8(5):267-288.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2. Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, OCEBM Levels of Evidence Working Group. The Oxford Levels of Evidence, 2.1. Available from http://www.cebm.net/index.aspx?o=5653.Google Scholar
3. Guyatt, G, Gutterman, D, Baumann, MH, Addrizzo-Harris, D, Hylek, EM, Phillips, B, et al. Grading strength of recommendations and quality of evidence in clinical guidelines: report from an American College of Chest Physicians task force. Chest. 2006;129(1):174-181.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4. Kishnani, PS, Howell, RR. Pompe disease in infants and children. J Pediatr. 2004;144(Suppl 5):S35-S43.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5. Kishnani, PS, Hwu, WL, Mandel, H, Nicolino, M, Yong, F, Corzo, D. A retrospective, multinational, multicenter study on the natural history of infantile-onset Pompe disease. J Pediatr. 2006;148(5):671-676.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6. Byrne, BJ, Kishnani, PS, Case, LE, Merlini, L, Müller-Felber, W, Prasad, S, et al. Pompe disease: design, methodology, and early findings from the Pompe Registry. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;103(1):1-11; Erratum in: Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104(3):424.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7. van den Hout, HM, Hop, W, van Diggelen, OP, Smeitink, JA, Smit, GP, Poll-The, BT, et al. The natural course of infantile Pompe’s disease: 20 original cases compared with 133 cases from the literature. Pediatrics. 2003;112(2):332-340.10.1542/peds.112.2.332CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
8. Jones, HN, Muller, CW, Lin, M, Banugaria, SG, Case, LE, Li, JS, et al. Oropharyngeal dysphagia in infants and children with infantile Pompe disease. Dysphagia. 2010;25(4):277-283.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9. Hamdan, MA, El-Zoabi, BA, Begam, MA, Mirghani, HM, Almalik, MH. Antenatal diagnosis of Pompe disease by fetal echocardiography: impact on outcome after early initiation of enzyme replacement therapy. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2010;33(Suppl 3):S333-S339.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
10. Barker, PC, Pasquali, SK, Darty, S, Ing, RJ, Li, JS, Kim, RJ, et al. Use of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate cardiac structure, function and fibrosis in children with infantile Pompe disease on enzyme replacement therapy. Mol Genet Metab. 2010;101(4):332-337.10.1016/j.ymgme.2010.07.011CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
11. Chen, LR, Chen, CA, Chiu, SN, Chien, YH, Lee, NC, Lin, MT, et al. Reversal of cardiac dysfunction after enzyme replacement in patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease. J Pediatr. 2009;155(2):271-275.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
12. Prater, SN, Banugaria, SG, DeArmey, SM, Botha, EG, Stege, EM, Case, LE, et al. The emerging phenotype of long-term survivors with infantile Pompe disease. Genet Med. 2012;14(9):800-810.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13. Sacconi, S, Wahbi, K, Theodore, G, Garcia, J, Salviati, L, Bouhour, F, et al. Atrio-ventricular block requiring pacemaker in patients with late-onset Pompe disease. Neuromuscul Disord. 2014;24(7):648-650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
14. Fung, KP, Lo, RN, Ho, HC. Pompe’s disease presenting as supraventricular tachycardia. Aust Paediatr J. 1989;25(2):101-102.Google ScholarPubMed
15. Hagemans, ML, Winkel, LP, Hop, WC, Reuser, AJ, van Doorn, PA, van der Ploeg, AT. Disease severity in children and adults with Pompe disease related to age and disease duration. Neurology. 2005;64(12):2139-2141.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
16. Hagemans, ML, Winkel, LP, van Doorn, PA, Hop, WJ, Loonen, MC, Reuser, AJ, et al. Clinical manifestation and natural course of late-onset Pompe’s disease in 54 Dutch patients. Brain. 2005;128(Pt 3):671-677.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
17. Ausems, MG, Verbiest, J, Hermans, MP, Kroos, MA, Beemer, FA, Wokke, JH, et al. Frequency of glycogen storage disease type II in The Netherlands: implications for diagnosis and genetic counselling. Eur J Hum Genet. 1999;7(6):713-716.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
18. van der Beek, NA, Hagemans, ML, Reuser, AJ, Hop, WC, van der Ploeg, AT, van Doorn, PA, et al. Rate of disease progression during long-term follow-up of patients with late-onset Pompe disease. Neuromuscul Disord. 2009;19(2):113-117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
19. Güngör, D, de Vries, JM, Hop, WC, Reuser, AJ, van Doorn, PA, van der Ploeg, AT, et al. Survival and associated factors in 268 adults with Pompe disease prior to treatment with enzyme replacement therapy. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2011;6:34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20. Schuller, A, Wenninger, S, Strigl-Pill, N, Schoser, B. Toward deconstructing the phenotype of late-onset Pompe disease. Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet. 2012;160C(1):80-88.10.1002/ajmg.c.31322CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
21. Laforêt, P, Nicolino, M, Eymard, PB, Puech, JP, Caillaud, C, Poenaru, L, et al. Juvenile and adult-onset acid maltase deficiency in France: genotype–phenotype correlation. Neurology. 2000;55(8):1122-1128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
22. van der Beek, NA, de Vries, JM, Hagemans, ML, Hop, WC, Kroos, MA, Wokke, JH, et al. Clinical features and predictors for disease natural progression in adults with Pompe disease: a nationwide prospective observational study. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2012;7:88.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
23. Hagemans, ML, Hop, WJ, van Doorn, PA, Reuser, AJ, van der Ploeg, AT. Course of disability and respiratory function in untreated late-onset Pompe disease. Neurology. 2006;66(4):581-583.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
24. Wokke, JH, Escolar, DM, Pestronk, A, Jaffe, KM, Carter, GT, van den Berg, LH, et al. Clinical features of late-onset Pompe disease: a prospective cohort study. Muscle Nerve. 2008;38(4):1236-1245.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
25. Müller-Felber, W, Horvath, R, Gempel, K, Podskarbi, T, Shin, Y, Pongratz, D, Walter, MC, et al. Late-onset Pompe disease: clinical and neurophysiological spectrum of 38 patients including long-term follow-up in 18 patients. Neuromuscul Disord. 2007;17(9-10):698-706.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
26. Laforêt, P, Nicolino, M, Eymard, B, Puech, JP, Caillaud, C, Poenaru, L, et al. Juvenile and adult-onset acid maltase deficiency in France. Neurology. 2000;55(8):1122-1128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
27. Kostera-Pruszczyk, A, Opuchlik, A, Lugowska, A, Nadaj, A, Bojakowski, J, Tylki-Szymanska, A, et al. Juvenile onset acid maltase deficiency presenting as a rigid spine syndrome. Neuromuscul Disord. 2006;16(4):282-285.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
28. Panosyan, FB, Fitzpatrick, MF, Bolton, CF. Late-onset Pompe disease mimicking rigid spine syndrome. Can J Neurol Sci. 2014;41(2):286-289.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
29. Wens, SC, van Gelder, CM, Kruijshaar, ME, de Vries, JM, van der Beek, NA, Reuser, AJ, et al. Phenotypical variation within 22 families with Pompe disease. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2013;8:182.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
30. Alejaldre, A, Díaz-Manera, J, Ravaglia, S, Tibaldi, EC, D’Amore, F, Morís, G, et al. Trunk muscle involvement in late-onset Pompe disease: study of thirty patients. Neuromuscul Disord. 2012;22(Suppl 2):S148-S154.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
31. Yanovitch, TL, Banugaria, SG, Proia, AD, Kishnani, PS. Clinical and histologic ocular findings in Pompe disease. J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus. 2010;47(1):34-40.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
32. Rosenow, EC 3rd, Engel, AG. Acid maltase deficiency in adults presenting as respiratory failure. Am J Med. 1978;64(3):485-491.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
33. Sivak, ED, Salanga, VD, Wilbourn, AJ, Mitsumoto, H, Golish, J. Adult-onset acid maltase deficiency presenting as diaphragmatic paralysis. Ann Neurol. 1981;9(6):613-615.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
34. Keunen, RW, Lambregts, PC, Op de Coul, AA, Joosten, EM. Respiratory failure as initial symptom of acid maltase deficiency. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1984;47(5):549-552.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
35. Moufarrej, NA, Bertorini, TE. Respiratory insufficiency in adult-type acid maltase deficiency. South Med J. 1993;86(5):560-567.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
36. Arad, M, Moskowitz, IP, Patel, VV, Ahmad, F, Perez-Atayde, AR, Sawyer, DB, et al. Transgenic mice overexpressing mutant PRKAG2 define the cause of Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome in glycogen storage cardiomyopathy. Circulation. 2003;107(22):2850-2856.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
37. Limongelli, G, Fratta, F. Cardiovascular involvement in Pompe disease. Acta Myol. 2011;30:202-203.Google Scholar
38. El-Gharbawy, AH, Bhat, G, Murillo, JE, Thurberg, BL, Kampmann, C, Mengel, KE, et al. Expanding the clinical spectrum of late-onset Pompe disease: dilated arteriopathy involving the thoracic aorta, a novel vascular phenotype uncovered. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;103(4):362-366.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
39. Carpenter, S, Karpati, G. editors Pathology of Skeletal Muscle, 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2001.Google Scholar
40. Dubowitz, V, Sewry, CA, Oldfors, A. Muscle Biopsy: A Practical Approach, 3rd ed. Amsterdam: Elsevier/Saunders; 2007.Google Scholar
41. Fernández, R, Fernández, JM, Cervera, C, Teijeira, S, Teijeiro, A, Domínguez, C, et al. Adult glycogenosis II with paracrystalline mitochondrial inclusions and Hirano bodies in skeletal muscle. Neuromuscul Disorders. 1999;9(3):136-143.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
42. Sarnat, HB, Marin-Garcia, J. Pathology of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. Can J Neurol Sci. 2005;32(2):152-166.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
43. Schlenska, GK, Heene, R, Spalke, G, Seiler, D. The symptomatology, morphology and biochemistry of glycogenosis type II (Pompe) in the adult. J Neurol. 1976;212(3):237-252.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
44. Werneck, LC, Lorenzoni, PJ, Kay, CS, Scola, RH. Muscle biopsy in Pompe disease. Arq Neuropsiquiatr. 2013;71(5):284-289.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
45. Hobson-Webb, LD, Proia, AD, Thurberg, BL, Banugaria, S, Prater, SN, Kishnani, PS. Autopsy findings in late-onset Pompe disease: a case report and systematic review of the literature. Mol Genet Metab. 2012;106(4):462-469.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
46. Martini, C, Ciana, G, Benettoni, A, Katouzian, F, Severini, GM, Bussani, R, et al. Intractable fever and cortical neuronal glycogen storage in glycogenosis type 2. Neurology. 2001;57(5):906-908.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
47. Martin, JJ, de Barsy, T, van Hoof, F, Palladini, G. Pompe’s disease: an inborn lysosomal disorder with storage of glycogen. A study of brain and striated muscle. Acta Neuropathol. 1973;23(3):229-244.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
48. Parise, G, Phillips, SM, Kaczor, JJ, Tarnopolsky, MA. Antioxidant enzyme activity is up-regulated after unilateral resistance exercise training in older adults. Free Radic Biol Med. 2005;39(2):289-295.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
49. Vissing, J, Lukacs, Z, Straub, V. Diagnosis of Pompe disease: muscle biopsy vs. blood-based assays. JAMA Neurol. 2013;70(7):923-927.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
50. Winkel, LP, Hagemans, ML, van Doorn, PA, Loonen, MC, Hop, WJ, Reuser, AJ, et al. The natural course of non-classic Pompe’s disease: a review of 225 published cases. J Neurol. 2005;252(8):875-884.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
51. Mellies, U, Ragette, R, Schwake, C, Baethmann, M, Voit, T, Teschler, H. Sleep-disordered breathing and respiratory failure in acid maltase deficiency. Neurology. 2001;57(7):1290-1295.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
52. Margolis, ML, Howlett, P, Goldberg, R, Eftychiadis, A, Levine, S. Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome in acid maltase deficiency. Chest. 1994;105(3):947-949.10.1378/chest.105.3.947CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
53. American Association of Neuromuscular and Electrodiagnostic Medicine. Diagnostic criteria for late-onset (childhood and adult) Pompe disease. Muscle Nerve. 2009;40(1):149-160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
54. McCool, FD, Tzelepis, GE. Dysfunction of the diaphragm. New Engl J Med. 2012;366(10):932-942.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
55. van der Beek, NA, van Capelle, CI, van der Velden-van Etten, KI, Etten, KI, Hop, WC, van den Berg, B, et al. Rate of progression and predictive factors for pulmonary outcome in children and adults with Pompe disease. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104(1–2):129-136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
56. Pellegrini, N, Laforêt, P, Orlikowski, D, Pellegrini, M, Caillaud, C, Eymard, B, Raphael, JC, et al. Respiratory insufficiency and limb muscle weakness in adults with Pompe’s disease. Eur Respir J. 2005;26(6):1024-1031.10.1183/09031936.05.00020005CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
57. Roberts, M, Kishnani, PS, van der Ploeg, AT, Müller-Felber, W, Merlini, L, Prasad, S, et al. The prevalence and impact of scoliosis in Pompe disease: lessons learned from the Pompe Registry. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104(4):574-582.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
58. Cupler, EJ, Berger, KI, Leshner, RT, Wolfe, GI, Han, JJ, Barohn, RJ, et al. Consensus treatment recommendations for late-onset Pompe disease. Muscle Nerve. 2012;45(3):319-333.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
59. van den Berg, LE, Zandbergen, AA, van Capelle, CI, de Vries, JM, Hop, WC, van den Hout, JM, et al. Low bone mass in Pompe disease: muscular strength as a predictor of bone mineral density. Bone. 2010;47(3):643-649.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
60. Ing, RJ, Cook, DR, Bengur, RA, Williams, EA, Eck, J, Dear Gde, L, et al. Anaesthetic management of infants with glycogen storage disease type II: a physiological approach. Paediatr Anaesth. 2004;14(6):514-519.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
61. Wang, LY, Ross, AK, Li, JS, Dearmey, SM, Mackey, JF, Worden, M, et al. Cardiac arrhythmias following anesthesia induction in infantile-onset Pompe disease: a case series. Paediatr Anaesth. 2007;17(8):738-748.10.1111/j.1460-9592.2007.02215.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
62. Prater, SN, Banugaria, SG, Dearmey, SM, Botha, EG, Stege, EM, Case, LE, et al. The emerging phenotype of long-term survivors with infantile Pompe disease. Genet Med. 2012;14(9):800-810.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
63. van der Ploeg, AT, Clemens, PR, Corzo, D, Escolar, DM, Florence, J, Groeneveld, GJ, Herson, S, et al. A randomized study of alglucosidase alfa in late-onset Pompe’s disease. N Engl J Med. 2010;362(15):1396-1406.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
64. Gungor, D, Kruijshaar, ME, Plug, I, D’Agostino, RB, Hagemans, ML, van Doorn, PA, et al. Impact of enzyme replacement therapy on survival in adults with Pompe disease: results from a prospective international observational study. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2013;8:49.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
65. Kansagra, S, Austin, S, DeArmey, S, Kishnani, PS, Kravitz, RM. Polysomnographic findings in infantile Pompe disease. Am J Med Genet A. 2013;161A(12):3196-3200.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
66. van Gelder, CM, van Capelle, CI, Ebbink, BJ, Ebbink, BJ, Moor-van Nugteren, I, van den Hout, JM, et al. Facial-muscle weakness, speech disorders and dysphagia are common in patients with classic infantile Pompe disease treated with enzyme therapy. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2012;35(3):505-511.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
67. Kishnani, PS, Corzo, D, Leslie, ND, Gruskin, D, van der Ploeg, A, Clancy, JP, et al. Early treatment with alglucosidase alpha prolongs long-term survival of infants with Pompe disease. Pediatr Res. 2009;66(3):329-335.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
68. Chen, CA, Chien, YH, Hwu, WL, Lee, NC, Wang, JK, Chen, LR, et al. Left ventricular geometry, global function, and dyssynchrony in infants and children with Pompe cardiomyopathy undergoing enzyme replacement therapy. J Card Fail. 2011;17(11):930-936.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
69. Bali, DS, Goldstein, JL, Banugaria, S, Dai, J, Mackey, J, Rehder, C, et al. Predicting cross-reactive immunological material (CRIM) status in Pompe disease using GAA mutations: lessons learned from 10 years of clinical laboratory testing experience. Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet. 2012;160(1):40-49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
70. Banugaria, SG, Prater, SN, Ng, YK, Kobori, JA, Finkel, RS, Ladda, RL, et al. The impact of antibodies on clinical outcomes in diseases treated with therapeutic protein: lessons learned from infantile Pompe disease. Genet Med. 2011;13(8):729-736.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
71. Kishnani, PS, Goldenberg, PC, DeArmey, SL, Heller, J, Benjamin, D, Young, S, et al. Cross-reactive immunologic material status affects treatment outcomes in Pompe disease infants. Mol Genet Metab. 2010;99(1):26-33.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
72. Messinger, YH, Mendelsohn, NJ, Rhead, W, Dimmock, D, Hershkovitz, E, Champion, M, et al. Successful immune tolerance induction to enzyme replacement therapy in CRIM-negative infantile Pompe disease. Genet Med. 2012;14(1):135-142.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
73. Mendelsohn, NJ, Messinger, YH, Rosenberg, AS, Kishnani, PS. Elimination of antibodies to recombinant enzyme in Pompe’s disease. N Engl J Med. 2009;360(2):194-195.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
74. Banugaria, SG, Prater, SN, Patel, TT, Dearmey, SM, Milleson, C, Sheets, KB, et al. Algorithm for the early diagnosis and treatment of patients with cross reactive immunologic material-negative classic infantile Pompe disease: a step towards improving the efficacy of ERT. PLoS One. 2013;8(6):e67052.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
75. Moggio, M, Colombo, I, Peverelli, L, Villa, L, Xhani, R, Testolin, S, et al. Mitochondrial disease heterogeneity: a prognostic challenge. Acta Myol. 2014;33(2):86-93.Google ScholarPubMed
76. Regnery, C, Kornblum, C, Hanisch, F, Vielhaber, S, Strigl-Pill, N, Grunert, B, et al. 36 months observational clinical study of 38 adult Pompe disease patients under alglucosidase alfa enzyme replacement therapy. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2012;35(5):837-845.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
77. van der Ploeg, AT, Barohn, R, Carlson, L, Charrow, J, Clemens, PR, Hopkin, RJ, et al. Open-label extension study following the Late-Onset Treatment Study (LOTS) of alglucosidase alfa. Mol Genet Metab. 2012;107(3):456-461.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
78. de Vries, JM, van der Beek, NA, Hop, WC, Karstens, FP, Wokke, JH, de Visser, M, et al. Effect of enzyme therapy and prognostic factors in 69 adults with Pompe disease: an open-label single-center study. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2012;7:73.10.1186/1750-1172-7-73CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
79. Toscano, A, Schoser, B. Enzyme replacement therapy in late-onset Pompe disease: a systematic literature review. J Neurol. 2013;260(4):951-959.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
80. Anderson, LJ, Henley, W, Wyatt, KM, Nikolaou, V, Waldek, S, Hughes, DA, et al. Effectiveness of enzyme replacement therapy in adults with late-onset Pompe disease: results from the NCS–LSD cohort study. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2014;37(6):945-952.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
81. Angelini, C, Semplicini, C, Ravaglia, S, Bembi, B, Servidei, S, Pegoraro, E, et al. Observational clinical study in juvenile–adult glycogenosis type 2 patients undergoing enzyme replacement therapy for up to 4 years. J Neurol. 2012;259(5):952-958.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
82. Strothotte, S, Strigl-Pill, N, Grunert, B, Kornblum, C, Eger, K, Wessig, C, et al. Enzyme replacement therapy with alglucosidase alfa in 44 patients with late-onset glycogen storage disease type 2: 12-month results of an observational clinical trial. J Neurol. 2010;257(1):91-97.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
83. de Vries, JM, van der Beek, NA, Hop, WC, Karstens, FP, Wokke, JH, de Visser, M, et al. Effect of enzyme therapy and prognostic factors in 69 adults with Pompe disease: an open-label single-center study. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2012;7(1):73.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
84. Gungor, D, Schober, AK, Kruijshaar, ME, Plug, I, Karabul, N, Deschauer, M, et al. Pain in adult patients with Pompe disease: a cross-sectional survey. Mol Genet Metab. 2013;109(4):371-376.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
85. Hagemans, ML, van Schie, SP, Janssens, AC, van Doorn, PA, Reuser, AJ, van der Ploeg, AT. Fatigue: an important feature of late-onset Pompe disease. J Neurol. 2007;254(7):941-945.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
86. Gungor, D, de Vries, JM, Brusse, E, Kruijshaar, ME, Hop, WC, Murawska, M, et al. Enzyme replacement therapy and fatigue in adults with Pompe disease. Mol Genet Metab. 2013;109(2):174-178.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
87. Case, LE, Bjartmar, C, Morgan, C, Casey, R, Charrow, J, Clancy, JP, et al. Safety and efficacy of alternative alglucosidase alfa regimens in Pompe disease. Neuromuscul Disord. 2015;25(4):321-332.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
88. Schoser, B, Laforêt, P, Kruijshaar, ME, Toscano, A, van Doorn, PA, van der Ploeg, AT, et al. 208th ENMC International Workshop: formation of a European network to develop a European data sharing model and treatment guidelines for Pompe disease. Naarden, The Netherlands, 26–28 September 2014. Neuromuscul Disord. 2015;25(8):674-678.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
89. Hundsberger, T, Rohrbach, M, Kern, L, Rosler, KM. Swiss national guideline for reimbursement of enzyme replacement therapy in late-onset Pompe disease. J Neurol. 2013;260(9):2279-2285.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
90. Patel, TT, Banugaria, SG, Case, LE, Wenninger, S, Schoser, B, Kishnani, PS. The impact of antibodies in late-onset Pompe disease: a case series and literature review. Mol Gen Metab. 2012;106(3):301-309.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
91. de Vries, JM, van der Beek, NA, Kroos, MA, Ozkan, L, van Doorn, PA, Richards, SM, et al. High antibody titer in an adult with Pompe disease affects treatment with alglucosidase alfa. Mol Genet Metab. 2010;101(4):338-345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
92. Papadopoulos, C, Papadimas, GK, Spengos, K, Manta, P. Pretreatment antibodies against acid alpha-glycosidase in a patient with late-onset Pompe disease. Muscle Nerve. 2012;45(3):452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
93. El-Gharbawy, AH, Mackey, J, DeArmey, S, Westby, G, Grinnell, SG, Malovrh, P, et al. An individually, modified approach to desensitize infants and young children with Pompe disease, and significant reactions to alglucosidase alfa infusions. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104(1–2):118-122.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
94. Motlagh, B, MacDonald, JR, Tarnopolsky, MA. Nutritional inadequacy in adults with muscular dystrophy. Muscle Nerve. 2005;31(6):713-718.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
95. Isaacs, H, Savage, N, Badenhorst, M, Whistler, T. Acid maltase deficiency: a case study and review of the pathophysiological changes and proposed therapeutic measures. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1986;49(9):1011-1018.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
96. Umpleby, AM, Wiles, CM, Trend, PS, Chubb, D, Conaglen, JV, Williams, CD, et al. Protein turnover in acid maltase deficiency before and after treatment with a high protein diet. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1987;50(5):587-592.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
97. Slonim, AE, Coleman, RA, McElligot, MA, Najjar, J, Hirschhorn, K, Labadie, GU, et al. Improvement of muscle function in acid maltase deficiency by high-protein therapy. Neurology. 1983;33(1):34-38.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
98. Margolis, ML, Hill, AR. Acid maltase deficiency in an adult. Evidence for improvement in respiratory function with high-protein dietary therapy. Am Rev Respir Dis. 1986;134(2):328-331.Google Scholar
99. Demey, HE, van Meerbeeck, JP, Vandewoude, MF, Prové, AM, Martin, JJ, Bossaert, LL. Respiratory insufficiency in acid maltase deficiency: the effect of high-protein diet. J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 1989;13(3):321-323.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
100. Umpleby, AM, Trend, PS, Chubb, D, Conaglen, JV, Williams, CD, Hesp, R, et al. The effect of a high-protein diet on leucine and alanine turnover in acid maltase deficiency. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1989;52(8):954-961.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
101. Slonim, AE, Bulone, L, Goldberg, T, Minikes, J, Slonim, E, Galanko, J, et al. Modification of the natural history of adult-onset acid maltase deficiency by nutrition and exercise therapy. Muscle Nerve. 2007;35(1):70-77.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
102. Ceglia, L. Vitamin D and skeletal muscle tissue and function. Mol Aspects Med. 2008;29(6):407-414.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
103. Pascual, JM, Roe, CR. Systemic metabolic abnormalities in adult-onset acid maltase deficiency: beyond muscle glycogen accumulation. JAMA Neurol. 2013;70(6):756-763.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
104. Khan, A, Weinstein, Z, Hanley, DA, Casey, R, McNeil, C, Ramage, B, et al. In vivo bone architecture in Pompe disease using high-resolution peripheral computed tomography. JIMD Rep. 2013;7:81-88.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
105. Ross, AC, Manson, JE, Abrams, SA, Aloia, JF, Brannon, PM, Clinton, SK, et al. The 2011 report on dietary reference intakes for calcium and vitamin D from the Institute of Medicine: what clinicians need to know. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2011;96(1):53-58.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
106. Langlois, K, Greene-Finestone, L, Little, J, Hidiroglou, N, Whiting, S. Vitamin D status of Canadians as measured in the 2007 to 2009 Canadian Health Measures Survey. Health Rep. 2010;21(1):47-55.Google ScholarPubMed
107. Whiting, SJ, Langlois, KA, Vatanparast, H, Greene-Finestone, LS. The vitamin D status of Canadians relative to the 2011 Dietary Reference Intakes: an examination in children and adults with and without supplement use. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011;94(1):128-135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
108. Hanley, DA, Cranney, A, Jones, G, Whiting, SJ, Leslie, WD, Cole, DE, et al. Vitamin D in adult health and disease: a review and guideline statement from Osteoporosis Canada. CMAJ. 2010;182(12):E610-E618.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
109. Holick, MF, Binkley, NC, Bischoff-Ferrari, HA, Gordon, CM, Hanley, DA, Heaney, RP, et al. Guidelines for preventing and treating vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency revisited. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2012;97(4):1153-1158.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
110. Fromageot, C, Lofaso, F, Annane, D, Falaize, L, Lejaille, M, Clair, B, et al. Supine fall in lung volumes in the assessment of diaphragmatic weakness in neuromuscular disorders. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2001;82(1):123-128.10.1053/apmr.2001.18053CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
111. Mier-Jedrzejowicz, A, Brophy, C, Moxham, J, Green, M. Assessment of diaphragm weakness. Am Rev Respir Dis. 1988;137(4):877-883.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
112. Prigent, H, Orlikowski, D, Laforêt, P, Letilly, N, Falaize, L, Pellegrini, N, et al. Supine volume drop and diaphragmatic function in adults with Pompe disease. Eur Respir J. 2012;39(6):1545-1546.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
113. Ragette, R, Mellies, U, Schwake, C, Voit, T, Teschler, H. Patterns and predictors of sleep-disordered breathing in primary myopathies. Thorax. 2002;57(8):724-728.10.1136/thorax.57.8.724CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
114. Heritier, F, Rahm, F, Pasche, P, Fitting, JW. Sniff nasal inspiratory pressure: a noninvasive assessment of inspiratory muscle strength. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1994;150(6 Pt 1):1678-1683.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
115. Stefanutti, D, Benoist, MR, Scheinmann, P, Chaussain, M, Fitting, JW. Usefulness of sniff nasal pressure in patients with neuromuscular or skeletal disorders. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2000;162(4 Pt 1):1507-1511.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
116. Szeinberg, A, Tabachnik, E, Rashed, N, McLaughlin, FJ, England, S, Bryan, CA, et al. Cough capacity in patients with muscular dystrophy. Chest. 1988;94(6):1232-1235.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
117. Bach, JR, Ishikawa, Y, Kim, H. Prevention of pulmonary morbidity for patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Chest. 1997;112(4):1024-1028.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
118. Sancho, J, Servera, E, Díaz, J, Marin, J. Predictors of ineffective cough during a chest infection in patients with stable amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2007;175(12):1266-1271.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
119. Miller, MR, Hankinson, J, Brusasco, V, Burgos, F, Casaburi, R, Coates, A, et al. Standardisation of spirometry. Eur Respir J. 2005;26(2):319-338.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
120. McKim, DA, Road, J, Avendano, M, Abdool, S, Cote, F, Duguid, N, et al. Home mechanical ventilation: a Canadian Thoracic Society clinical practice guideline. Can Respir J. 2011;18(4):197-215.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
121. Simonds, AK, Muntoni, F, Heather, S, Fielding, S. Impact of nasal ventilation on survival in hypercapnic Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Thorax. 1998;53(11):949-952.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
122. Mellies, U, Stehling, F, Dohna-Schwake, C, Ragette, R, Teschler, H, Voit, T. Respiratory failure in Pompe disease: treatment with noninvasive ventilation. Neurology. 2005;64(8):1465-1467.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
123. Annane, D, Quera-Salva, MA, Lofaso, F, Vercken, JB, Lesieur, O, Fromageot, C, et al. Mechanisms underlying effects of nocturnal ventilation on daytime blood gases in neuromuscular diseases. Eur Respir J. 1999;13(1):157-162.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
124. Ward, S, Chatwin, M, Heather, S, Simonds, AK. Randomised controlled trial of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) for nocturnal hypoventilation in neuromuscular and chest wall disease patients with daytime normocapnia. Thorax. 2005;60(12):1019-1024.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
125. Chadda, K, Clair, B, Orlikowski, D, Macadoux, G, Raphael, JC, Lofaso, F. Pressure support versus assisted controlled noninvasive ventilation in neuromuscular disease. Neurocrit Care. 2004;1(4):429-434.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
126. Toussaint, M, Steens, M, Wasteels, G, Soudon, P. Diurnal ventilation via mouthpiece: survival in end-stage Duchenne patients. Eur Respir J. 2006;28(3):549-555.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
127. Nilsson, MI, Samjoo, IA, Hettinga, BP, Koeberl, DD, Zhang, H, Hawke, TJ, et al. Aerobic training as an adjunctive therapy to enzyme replacement in Pompe disease. Mol Genet Metab. 2012;107(3):469-479.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
128. Terzis, G, Dimopoulos, F, Papadimas, GK, Papadopoulos, C, Spengos, K, Fatouros, I, et al. Effect of aerobic and resistance exercise training on late-onset Pompe disease patients receiving enzyme replacement therapy. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104(3):279-283.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
129. Terzis, G, Krase, A, Papadimas, G, Papadopoulos, C, Kavouras, SA, Manta, P. Effects of exercise training during infusion on late-onset Pompe disease patients receiving enzyme replacement therapy. Mol Genet Metab. 2012;107(4):669-673.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
130. Burns, PB, Rohrich, RJ, Chung, KC. The levels of evidence and their role in evidence-based medicine. Plast Reconstructr Surg. 2011;128(1):305-310.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
131. Tarnopolsky, M, Zimmer, A, Paikin, J, Safdar, A, Aboud, A, Pearce, E, et al. Creatine monohydrate and conjugated linoleic acid improve strength and body composition following resistance exercise in older adults. PloS One. 2007;2(10):e991.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
132. Jones, HN, Moss, T, Edwards, L, Kishnani, PS. Increased inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength following respiratory muscle strength training (RMST) in two patients with late-onset Pompe disease. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;104(3):417-420.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
133. Anziska, Y, Sternberg, A. Exercise in neuromuscular disease. Muscle Nerve. 2013;48(1):3-20.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
134. Hagemans, ML, Janssens, AC, Winkel, LP, Sieradzan, KA, Reuser, AJ, van Doorn, PA, et al. Late-onset Pompe disease primarily affects quality of life in physical health domains. Neurology. 2004;63(9):1688-1692.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
135. Hagemans, ML, Laforêt, P, Hop, WJ, Merkies, IS, van Doorn, PA, Reuser, AJ, et al. Impact of late-onset Pompe disease on participation in daily life activities: evaluation of the Rotterdam Handicap Scale. Neuromuscul Disord. 2007;17(7):537-543.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
136. Haley, SM, Fragala, MA, Skrinar, AM. Pompe disease and physical disability. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2003;45(9):618-623.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
137. Laberge, L, Mathieu, J, Auclair, J, Gagnon, E, Noreau, L, Gagnon, C. Clinical, psychosocial, and central correlates of quality of life in myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients. Eur Neurol. 2013;70(5–6):308-315.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
138. Tieleman, AA, Jenks, KM, Kalkman, JS, Borm, G, van Engelen, BG. High disease impact of myotonic dystrophy type 2 on physical and mental functioning. J Neurol. 2011;258(10):1820-1826.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
139. van der Beek, NA, Hagemans, ML, van der Ploeg, AT, van Doorn, PA, Merkies, IS. The Rasch-built Pompe-specific activity (R–PAct) scale. Neuromuscul Disord. 2013;23(3):256-264.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
140. Manwaring, V, Prunty, H, Bainbridge, K, Burke, D, Finnegan, N, Franses, R, et al. Urine analysis of glucose tetrasaccharide by HPLC; a useful marker for the investigation of patients with Pompe and other glycogen storage diseases. J Inherit Metab Dis. 2012;35(2):311-316; Erratum in J Inherit Metab Dis. 2012;35(2):369.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
141. Young, SP, Zhang, H, Corzo, D, Thurberg, BL, Bali, D, Kishnani, PS, et al. Long-term monitoring of patients with infantile-onset Pompe disease on enzyme replacement therapy using a urinary glucose tetrasaccharide biomarker. Genet Med. 2009;11(7):536-541.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
142. Young, SP, Stevens, RD, An, Y, Chen, YT, Millington, DS. Analysis of a glucose tetrasaccharide elevated in Pompe disease by stable isotope dilution-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. Anal Biochem. 2003;316(2):175-180.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
143. Young, SP, Piraud, M, Goldstein, JL, Zhang, H, Rehder, C, Laforêt, P, et al. Assessing disease severity in Pompe disease: the roles of a urinary glucose tetrasaccharide biomarker and imaging techniques. Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet. 2012;160C(1):50-58.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
144. Chien, YH, Goldstein, JL, Hwu, WL, Smith, PB, Lee, NC, Chiang, SC, et al. Baseline urinary glucose tetrasaccharide concentrations in patients with infantile- and late-onset Pompe disease identified by newborn screening. JIMD Rep. 2015;19:67-73.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
145. Bushby, K, Finkel, R, Birnkrant, DJ, Case, LE, Clemens, PR, Cripe, L, et al. Diagnosis and management of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, part 1: diagnosis, and pharmacological and psychosocial management. Lancet Neurol. 2010;9(1):77-93.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
146. Maga, JA, Zhou, J, Kambampati, R, Peng, S, Wang, X, Bohnsack, RN, et al. Glycosylation-independent lysosomal targeting of acid alpha-glucosidase enhances muscle glycogen clearance in Pompe mice. J Biol Chem. 2013;288(3):1428-1438.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
147. Zhu, Y, Li, X, Kyazike, J, Zhou, Q, Thurberg, BL, Raben, N, et al. Conjugation of mannose 6-phosphate-containing oligosaccharides to acid alpha-glucosidase improves the clearance of glycogen in Pompe mice. J Biol Chem. 2004;279(48):50336-50341.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
148. Koeberl, DD, Luo, X, Sun, B, McVie-Wylie, A, Dai, J, Li, S, et al. Enhanced efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy in Pompe disease through mannose-6-phosphate receptor expression in skeletal muscle. Mol Genet Metab. 2011;103(2):107-112.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
149. Khanna, R, Flanagan, JJ, Feng, J, Soska, R, Frascella, M, Pellegrino, LJ, et al. The pharmacological chaperone AT2220 increases recombinant human acid alpha-glucosidase uptake and glycogen reduction in a mouse model of Pompe disease. PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e40776.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Management Guidelines and Recommendations for Pompe Disease