We report on clinical findings and long-term follow up of 12 XLMTM patients with the aim to describe the systemic complication of this disease.
Above all, our intention was to underlie the frequency of hepatobiliary comorbidity, quite often asymptomatic, in these fragile patients.
In our opinion, this aspect deserves particular attention in the light of recent and fatal events occurred in the three oldest and heaviest patients enrolled in the ASPIRO trial who have received the higher dosage of AT132 (3 x 1014 vg/kg).
Although the pathological mechanisms that lead to liver dysfunction are not yet fully understood, it is likely that hepatobiliary disease might have contributed to the fatal outcome. Hepatobiliary disease, including gallstones and peliosis hepatis, is a well-known comorbidity of XLMTM, and has been reported in several case series since the 90’s [8–11]. Retrospective and prospective cohort’s studies documented different percentages of this complication. Amburgey and colleagues have reported abnormal liver enzymes, enlarged liver and jaundice respectively in 22.5%, 11.8% and 14.7% in their cohort, as well as liver bleed/haemorrhage and gallstones in 5.9% and 8.8% of patients, respectively [8]. In the retrospective Recensus clinical study, hepatobiliary disorders were reported in 7% of patients [9]. Similar percentages were reported in NatHis prospective study [11] and in the retrospective study published by Herman and colleagues [10] in which the hepatobiliary complication were reported in less than 10% of patients.
In our case series the laboratory and instrumental examinations to investigate the hepatobiliary function have been systematically carried out, and we found hepatobiliary complication in a much higher percentage of patients. Abnormal liver structure (including higher or abnormal echogenicity or blood-filled cysts) was found in 7/12 patients, (58%) whereas in a third of our case studies we documented high levels of serum transaminases (5/12 patients). Gallstones were documented in 5/12 patients (42%) although they were clinically silent with normal value of GGT in all but one patient.
The longitudinal analysis of our data seems to suggest that hepatobiliary disease is not a progressive condition and that it does not correlate with age or disease duration, nor with clinical severity or type and site of MTM1 mutation. Indeed, our oldest patients (pt#3) do not manifest any liver abnormalities whereas the most serious episode of cholestasis occurred in one of the youngest child in our series. To date, it remains unknown why XLMTM patients have multisystem manifestations including the hepatobiliary disorders and the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms are still not clear.
Myotubularin is the archetypal member of the MTM family of lipid phosphatases which dephosphorylate phosphatidylinositol 3-monophosphate (PI3P) and phosphatidylinositol 3,5-bisphosphate (PI(3,5)P2), and it plays a role in lipid membrane trafficking from the late endosome to the lysosome, in vacuolar formation and morphology, and it also regulates desmin intermediate filament assembly and architecture [21–23].
Moreover, it has also been demonstrated that autophagy is compromised in skeletal muscle of mice MTM1-deficient mice through the hyperactivation of the mTORC1 signaling [6]. Because the deregulation of autophagy has been also linked to many liver diseases including cholestasis [24, 25], we suggest that it may also have a role in the hepatobiliary disorders of XLMTM patients.
In conclusion, the long-term clinical observation in our cohort confirm that hepatobiliary disease is a common complication of XLMTM, that we observed in a higher percentage of patients than previously reported. We strongly recommend to carefully explore and monitor the hepatobiliary function in XLMTM patients. The early recognition of this complication may help the patient’s management, both for ordinary care and for any experimental treatment.
Finally, we believe that a better understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms that induce hepatobiliary damage would be essential to understand the fatal events that may occur in the gene therapy program.