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Long-Term Treatment of Cerebrotendinous Xanthomatosis with Chenodeoxycholic Acid

List of authors.
  • Vladimir M. Berginer, M.D., Ph.D.,
  • Gerald Salen, M.D.,
  • and Sarah Shefer, Ph.D.

Abstract

We studied the effect of chenodeoxycholic acid in 17 patients with cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis. Before treatment, all subjects were symptomatic, with Achilles tendon xanthomas (in 15 of 17), cataracts (in 12 of 17), dementia (in 13 of 17), pyramidal-tract signs (in all 17), cerebellar dysfunction (in 13 of 17), mild peripheral neuropathy (in 7 of 17), electroencephalographic abnormalities (in 10 of 13), and abnormal cerebral computerized axial tomographic scans (in 10 of 12). After at least one year of chenodeoxycholic acid treatment (750 mg per day), dementia cleared in 10 subjects, and pyramidal and cerebellar signs disappeared in 5 and improved in another 8. Peripheral neuropathy was no longer detected in six. The electroencephalogram became normal in five and showed fewer abnormalities in another three subjects. Cerebral computerized axial tomographic scans improved in seven patients; the changes included the disappearance of a cerebellar xanthoma in one case. Concomitantly, mean plasma cholestanol levels declined threefold, and abnormal bile acid synthesis was suppressed. We conclude that long-term therapy with chenodeoxycholic acid may correct the biochemical abnormalities and arrest and possibly reverse the progression of cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis. (N Engl J Med 1984; 311:1649–52.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by grants from the U.S. Public Health Service (AM-18707, HL-17807, and AM-26756) and the Herman Goldman Foundation.

We are indebted to Drs. Thomas W. Meriweather III, John D. Hughes, Robert Nelson, Christopher Saudek, Paul Prescott, Jean Renson, Kenneth Burman, Stuart Cook, Paul Swanson, William Johnson, Amos Korczyn, and Edna Kott, for referral of patients for the study; to Mr. J. Speck for technical assistance; to Mrs. B. Savell, for help in preparing the manuscript; and to Mrs. O. Iosub, who prepared the illustrations.

The chenodeoxycholic acid and ursodeoxycholic acid used in the study were a gift from the Falk Foundation, Freiburg, West Germany, and from Gipharmex, Milan, Italy.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Neurology, Soroka Medical Center, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel; the Gastroenterology Section, Veterans Administration Medical Center, East Orange, N.J., and the Department of Medicine, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey–New Jersey Medical School, Newark, N.J. Address reprint requests to Dr. Salen at the University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey Medical School, 100 Bergen St., Newark, NJ 07103.

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