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Contact:
Annie Bayne
Bryan Dotson
Columbia University
Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center
212-305-3900
212-305-5587
as862@columbia.edu
brd9005@nyp.org
PET SCANS CAN MONITOR FATTY ACID METABOLISM DISEASES
AND THEIR DEVASTATING EFFECTS ON THE HEART
The Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center Division of Cardiology is
doing unique research
to detect and follow the progression of these disorders
NEW YORK, Nov. 30, 2001 – PET scanning can improve the diagnosis
and characterization of fatty acid metabolism diseases, conditions which,
if untreated, can lead to severe heart problems and sudden death in affected
children, according to results from a study by researchers at Columbia
University College of Physicians & Surgeons.
In the
study, led by Dr. Steven R. Bergmann, professor of medicine and radiology
at the medical school and director of nuclear cardiology at Columbia Presbyterian
Medical Center of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, the researchers found
that positron emission tomography, or PET scanning, can non-invasively
assess abnormal patterns of energy metabolism in the hearts of young patients
affected by fatty acid metabolism disorders.
Fatty acid metabolism
disorders encompass a variety of rare inherited disorders in which sufferers
cannot break down or transport certain fatty acids to make energy in the
heart. Although the heart can use the sugar glucose after meals to derive
energy for its continuous pumping activity, in between meals the heart
shifts to other fuels, primarily fatty acids. Without the proper energy,
the heart could potentially stop.
Dr. Bergmann believes that some children in the United States who die suddenly
may actually have these fatty acid metabolism disorders that are undiagnosed.
It remains unknown how prevalent these diseases are.
While some affected children will outgrow the condition, others will need
care for the rest of their lives to prevent them from having a metabolic
crisis. Such children are fed with feeding tubes and have to be awakened
while they sleep or have a parent administer necessary medication or supplementation
throughout the night. The children also suffer skeletal muscle problems
and liver failure, if untreated.
PET allows imaging of internal body tissues by using short-lived positron-emitting
isotopes. Chemists incorporate the isotopes, manufactured by an on-site
cyclotron, into compounds of interest
to the researcher. In this study, palmitate, a long-chain fatty acid,
was labeled and injected into participants for imaging and blood flow evaluations
inside the heart.
While other tests, such as genetic or enzyme assays, diagnose fatty acid
metabolism disorders, they cannot always characterize the severity of the
disease and cannot provide direct information about the degree of cardiac
involvement.
The aim of the Columbia study was to use PET to understand the severity
of the diseases and their impact on the heart.
In the study, the researchers were able to monitor blood flow in the heart,
overall energy use in the heart, the percentage of fatty acid use relative
to total energy use, and heart function in 11 patients and six unaffected
siblings. The investigators found that affected children have a diminished
capacity to use fatty acids compared with their siblings and that affected
children’s fatty acids are deposited in a non-energy producing pathway,
storing them as fat.
Researchers are still enrolling patients to try to determine the prevalence
of these disorders and to do follow-up analyses. “We hope to continue these
studies to be able to follow the natural history of the disease and when
new treatments, such as gene therapy, become available, we will then be
able to monitor improvement in the patients over time,” Dr. Bergmann says.
“We are the only facility, as far as I know, that can do this type of study
because of our PET and cyclotron technology and our cardiac expertise.”
The results of the research are being published in the December issue of
the Journal of Inherited Metabolic Diseases.
· The researchers
are continuing to recruit more patients, children age 1 and older with
diagnosed fatty acid metabolism disorders, into their study. The study
is funded in part by a grant from the Department of Energy. The study also
includes children with inherited or idiopathic (when no known cause can
be found) cardiomyopathy, a disease in which the heart muscle becomes inflamed
and functions poorly.
· Ronald McDonald
House, a charity that provides housing for families and children needing
hospital evaluations, and Angel Flight, an organization that provides transportation
to medical care for sick children, helped families who live outside the
New York City area bring their children to Columbia-Presbyterian Medical
Center to be evaluated.
· The study was performed
at the Morton A. Kreitchman PET Center, a clinical and research imaging
facility housed at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, which comprises
the Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons and NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital.
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