Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease

Background: Wilson disease (WD) is an inherited neurometabolic disorder that results in excessive copper deposition in the liver and the brain, affecting children and young adults. Without treatment the disease is invariably fatal. Though treatments for WD have been available since the 1950s, the di...

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Main Authors: Annu Aggarwal, Mohit Bhatt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2018-02-01
Series:Tremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tremorjournal.org/index.php/tremor/article/view/525
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spelling doaj-fe645181b8df42d3a3c5d215025a07db2021-02-02T05:24:19ZengUbiquity PressTremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements2160-82882160-82882018-02-0111310.7916/D841881DAdvances in Treatment of Wilson DiseaseAnnu Aggarwal0Mohit Bhatt1Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital and Medical Research Institute, Mumbai, IndiaKokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital and Medical Research Institute, Mumbai, IndiaBackground: Wilson disease (WD) is an inherited neurometabolic disorder that results in excessive copper deposition in the liver and the brain, affecting children and young adults. Without treatment the disease is invariably fatal. Though treatments for WD have been available since the 1950s, the disease continues to be associated with considerable morbidity and mortality because of missed diagnosis, and delayed or inadequate treatment. In this paper we survey WD-related literature in order to review recent advances in WD treatment. Methods: We performed a literature search using the PubMed database for articles relating to WD and its medical treatment. We reviewed the articles, and cross-references of relevant articles, to summarize the current practices for treatment of WD. Results: The survey shows that if WD is properly treated, in most patients the liver can be stabilized, even severe neurological disability reversed, and patients can resume normal lives. Discussion: Medical treatment for WD includes use of copper chelators (penicillamine, trientine, dimercaprol, dimercaptopropane sulfonate, and ammonium tetrathiomolybdate) and drugs that decrease gastrointestinal copper absorption. Our knowledge of the treatment approaches has benefited from the large systematic clinical studies that have been conducted over the last decade. For each drug used to treat WD, we surveyed its development, indication for use, dosing, efficacy, and adverse effects.https://tremorjournal.org/index.php/tremor/article/view/525Wilson diseaseDimercaprolPenicillamineTrientineZincTetrathiomolybdateNeurologyNeurometabolic disorder
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annu Aggarwal
Mohit Bhatt
spellingShingle Annu Aggarwal
Mohit Bhatt
Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease
Tremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements
Wilson disease
Dimercaprol
Penicillamine
Trientine
Zinc
Tetrathiomolybdate
Neurology
Neurometabolic disorder
author_facet Annu Aggarwal
Mohit Bhatt
author_sort Annu Aggarwal
title Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease
title_short Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease
title_full Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease
title_fullStr Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease
title_full_unstemmed Advances in Treatment of Wilson Disease
title_sort advances in treatment of wilson disease
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Tremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements
issn 2160-8288
2160-8288
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Background: Wilson disease (WD) is an inherited neurometabolic disorder that results in excessive copper deposition in the liver and the brain, affecting children and young adults. Without treatment the disease is invariably fatal. Though treatments for WD have been available since the 1950s, the disease continues to be associated with considerable morbidity and mortality because of missed diagnosis, and delayed or inadequate treatment. In this paper we survey WD-related literature in order to review recent advances in WD treatment. Methods: We performed a literature search using the PubMed database for articles relating to WD and its medical treatment. We reviewed the articles, and cross-references of relevant articles, to summarize the current practices for treatment of WD. Results: The survey shows that if WD is properly treated, in most patients the liver can be stabilized, even severe neurological disability reversed, and patients can resume normal lives. Discussion: Medical treatment for WD includes use of copper chelators (penicillamine, trientine, dimercaprol, dimercaptopropane sulfonate, and ammonium tetrathiomolybdate) and drugs that decrease gastrointestinal copper absorption. Our knowledge of the treatment approaches has benefited from the large systematic clinical studies that have been conducted over the last decade. For each drug used to treat WD, we surveyed its development, indication for use, dosing, efficacy, and adverse effects.
topic Wilson disease
Dimercaprol
Penicillamine
Trientine
Zinc
Tetrathiomolybdate
Neurology
Neurometabolic disorder
url https://tremorjournal.org/index.php/tremor/article/view/525
work_keys_str_mv AT annuaggarwal advancesintreatmentofwilsondisease
AT mohitbhatt advancesintreatmentofwilsondisease
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