Newborn Screening
Isovaleric Acidemia
Guidance for primary care clinicians receiving a positive newborn screen result for isovaleric acidemia
Description
Isovaleric acidemia (IVA) is caused by a genetic deficiency of the enzyme isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase, which is involved in the metabolism of the branched-chain amino acid leucine found in dietary protein. This results in the inability to break down isovaleric acid and the subsequent accumulation of toxic isovaleryl-CoA derivatives. The clinical presentation is highly variable, ranging from asymptomatic to severely affected. It may present either in the neonatal period as an acute episode of fulminant metabolic acidosis and hyperammonemia in the acute neonatal form or later as a chronic intermittent form associated with failure to thrive and developmental delay with/without recurrent acidotic episodes.
Clinical Characteristics
- A "sweaty feet" odor
- Vomiting
- Lethargy progressing to coma
- Lab findings:
- Ketoacidosis
- Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia
Primary Care Management
Next Steps After a Positive Screen
- Contact the family and evaluate the infant for poor feeding, vomiting, lethargy, and odor of sweaty feet.
- Provide emergency treatment and referral for symptoms of poor feeding or vomiting.
- Continue breastfeeding if the infant appears healthy. If not, discuss with Metabolic Genetics whether the child should be admitted to the hospital for treatment (breastmilk contains fewer proteins than regular formulas).
- If there are any clinical symptoms, obtain BMP to check CO2 and anion gap and urine analysis (for ketones).
Confirming the Diagnosis
- To confirm the diagnosis, work with Newborn Screening Services (see NM providers [3]).
- Follow-up testing may include quantitative plasma acylcarnitine profile, urine organic acids, and urine acylglycine analysis.
If the Diagnosis is Confirmed
- Evaluate and continue ongoing collaborative management - consult Medical Genetics (see NM providers [2]).
- Educate the family about signs, symptoms, and the need for urgent care if the infant becomes ill. See Isovaleric Acidemia - Information for Parents (STAR-G) for additional information.
- Consider a low-protein, low-leucine, and high-carbohydrate diet for affected children.
- Most patients require oral L-carnitine and glycine for some affected children.
- Patients need intravenous calories (glucose,
intralipids) and bicarbonate during metabolic crisis episodes.
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Resources
Information & Support
Related Portal Content
For Professionals
Isovaleric Acidemia Acute Illness Protocol (NECMP)
A guideline for health care professionals treating the sick infant/child who has previously been diagnosed with isovaleric
acidemia; developed under the direction of Dr. Harvey Levy, Senior Associate in Medicine/Genetics at Children’s Hospital Boston,
and Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, for the New England Consortium of Metabolic Programs.
Isovaleric Acidemia (OMIM)
Information about clinical features, diagnosis, management, and molecular and population genetics; Online Mendelian Inheritance
in Man, authored and edited at the McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
For Parents and Patients
Isovaleric Acidemia - Information for Parents (STAR-G)
A fact sheet, written by a genetic counselor and reviewed by metabolic and genetic specialists, for families who have received
an initial diagnosis of a newborn disorder; Screening, Technology and Research in Genetics.
Isovaleric Acidemia (GARD)
Symptoms, causes, support groups, and clinical studies; Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center.
Isovaleric Acidemia: A Guide for Parents (PacNoRGG) ( 1.4 MB)
Eight-page guide that includes an overview, social concerns, sample treatment plan, glossary, regional resources, and references;
sponsored by the Pacific Northwest Regional Genetics Group.
Isovaleric Acidemia: A Guide for Parents (PacNoRGG) (Spanish) ( 187 KB)
Spanish translation of an 8-page guide that includes an overview, social concerns, sample treatment plan, glossary, regional
resources, and references; sponsored by the Pacific Northwest Regional Genetics Group.
Tools
NM ACT Sheet for Elevated C5 Acylcarnitine (ACMG) ( 117 KB)
Provides recommendations for clinical and laboratory follow-up of the newborn with out-of-range screening results, along with
other resources for clinicians and families; American College of Medical Genetics.
Confirmatory Algorithm for Elevated C5 (ACMG) ( 194 KB)
An algorithm of the basic steps involved in determining the final diagnosis of an infant with a positive newborn screen; American
College of Medical Genetics.
Services for Patients & Families in New Mexico (NM)
Service Categories | # of providers* in: | NM | NW | Other states (3) (show) | | NV | RI | UT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Medical Genetics | 2 | 1 | 5 | 4 | 7 | |||
Newborn Screening Services | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 3 |
For services not listed above, browse our Services categories or search our database.
* number of provider listings may vary by how states categorize services, whether providers are listed by organization or individual, how services are organized in the state, and other factors; Nationwide (NW) providers are generally limited to web-based services, provider locator services, and organizations that serve children from across the nation.
Authors & Reviewers
Author: | Brian J. Shayota, MD, MPH |
Reviewer: | Nancy C. Rose, MD |
2023: update: Brian J. Shayota, MD, MPHA |
2015: first version: Nicola Longo, MD, Ph.D.A |
Page Bibliography
Therrell BL Jr, Lloyd-Puryear MA, Camp KM, Mann MY.
Inborn errors of metabolism identified via newborn screening: Ten-year incidence data and costs of nutritional interventions
for research agenda planning.
Mol Genet Metab.
2014;113(1-2):14-26.
PubMed abstract / Full Text