Methylmalonic Acidemia (MMA)
1. DEFINITION AND CLASSIFICATION
- Definition: An autosomal recessive organic acidemia caused by a defect in the conversion of L-methylmalonyl-CoA to succinyl-CoA.
- Classification:
- Isolated MMA:
- Mutase Deficiency: MMUT gene defects. Subtypes: mut⁰ (complete deficiency) and mut⁻ (partial activity).
- Cobalamin Disorders: Defects in synthesis of adenosylcobalamin cofactor (cblA, cblB, cblD-MMA).
- Combined MMA and Homocystinuria: Defects in cytosolic cobalamin metabolism (cblC, cblD, cblF, cblJ, cblX).
- Isolated MMA:
2. ETIOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Metabolic Block: Deficiency of Methylmalonyl-CoA Mutase (MCM) or its cofactor 5-deoxyadenosylcobalamin.
- Precursors: Isoleucine, Valine, Methionine, Threonine (VOMIT), odd-chain fatty acids, and cholesterol side chains.
- Toxic Accumulation: Methylmalonic acid, propionyl-CoA, methylcitrate.
- Consequences:
- Mitochondrial Toxicity: Inhibition of Krebs cycle (citrate synthase) and oxidative phosphorylation.
- Hyperammonemia: Inhibition of N-acetylglutamate synthase (NAGS) by propionyl-CoA (urea cycle dysfunction).
- Hyperglycinemia: Inhibition of glycine cleavage system.
- Bone Marrow Suppression: Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia.
3. CLINICAL FEATURES
A. Neonatal Onset (Severe - typically mut⁰)
- "Sepsis-like" Presentation: Onset in first week of life.
- Symptoms: Poor feeding, vomiting, profound lethargy, hypotonia.
- Signs: Dehydration, hypothermia, respiratory distress (Kussmaul breathing due to acidosis).
- Neurologic: Rapid progression to seizures, coma, and death if untreated.
B. Chronic/Intermittent (Late Onset - mut⁻ or cbl types)
- GI: Recurrent vomiting, protein aversion, failure to thrive, chronic constipation.
- Neurologic: Developmental delay, hypotonia, regression during intercurrent illness.
- Acute Decompensation: Triggered by infection, fasting, or high protein intake.
4. COMPLICATIONS (LONG-TERM)
- Neurologic (Metabolic Stroke): Acute injury to the globus pallidus (basal ganglia) causing movement disorders (dystonia, chorea) and spasticity.
- Renal (Unique to MMA): Chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis leading to progressive Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). Most common in mut⁰.
- Other:
- Acute Pancreatitis.
- Optic Atrophy.
- Cardiomyopathy (less common than in Propionic Acidemia).
- Skin rashes (acrodermatitis enteropathica-like due to iatrogenic amino acid deficiency).
5. INVESTIGATIONS
- Screening Labs:
- Metabolic Acidosis: High anion gap.
- Ketosis/Ketonuria: Marked.
- Hyperammonemia: Mild to severe.
- Complete Blood Count: Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia.
- Hyperglycinemia.
- Diagnostic Tests:
- Urine Organic Acids: Massive elevation of Methylmalonic Acid. Presence of methylcitrate and 3-hydroxypropionate.
- Plasma Acylcarnitine Profile: Elevated C3 (propionylcarnitine) and C4DC (methylmalonylcarnitine).
- Plasma Homocysteine: To rule out combined MMA+HCU (cblC).
- Confirmation:
- Molecular Genetics: Panel for MMUT, MMAA, MMAB.
- B12 Responsiveness Testing: Clinical or in vitro challenge.
6. MANAGEMENT
A. Acute Decompensation
- Stop Protein Intake: Immediate cessation of exogenous protein (max 24-48 hours).
- Reverse Catabolism: High calorie IV fluids (D10 + Intralipids) at 1.5x maintenance.
- Detoxification:
- L-Carnitine: IV loading dose (100 mg/kg) to excrete propionylcarnitine.
- Ammonia Scavengers: Sodium Benzoate/Phenylacetate if hyperammonemic.
- Hemodialysis: For severe acidosis/hyperammonemia refractory to medical management.
- Cofactor: Empirical Hydroxocobalamin (Vitamin B12) IM injection (1 mg/day).
B. Chronic Management
- Dietary:
- Low protein diet restricted in Isoleucine, Valine, Methionine, Threonine.
- Medical foods (MMA/PA-free formula).
- Avoid prolonged fasting.
- Pharmacotherapy:
- Vitamin B12: Hydroxocobalamin IM for B12-responsive patients (cblA and some mut⁻).
- L-Carnitine: Maintenance (50-100 mg/kg/day).
- Gut Sterilization: Metronidazole or Neomycin to reduce gut bacterial production of propionate.
- Transplantation:
- Liver Transplant: Corrects metabolic instability but does not prevent renal progression or reverse existing brain damage.
- Combined Liver-Kidney: For patients with renal failure.
7. PROGNOSIS
- Heavily dependent on subtype (mut⁰ has poorest prognosis).
- Major morbidity includes intellectual disability and chronic renal failure.
- Early diagnosis via Newborn Screening improves survival but may not prevent all long-term complications.