Litcius/Paper detail

17α-Hydroxylase/17,20-Lyase Deficiency in 46,XY: Our Experience and Review of Literature

Madhur Maheshwari, Sneha Arya, Anurag Lila, Vijaya Sarathi, Rohit Barnabas, Khushnandan Rai, Vishwambhar Vishnu Bhandare, Saba Samad Memon, Manjiri Karlekar, Virendra Patil, Nalini S. Shah, Ambarish Kunwar, Tushar Bandgar

2022Journal of the Endocrine Society20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

CONTEXT: that have been identified in patients with 17α-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase deficiency (17OHD). OBJECTIVE: We aimed to describe 46,XY patients with 17OHD from our center and review the literature. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed genetically proven index cases of 17OHD from our 46,XY disorders of sex development cohort and reviewed similar cases from the literature (n = 150). Based on the phenotype, 17OHD probands were classified into combined severe deficiency (n = 128) and combined partial deficiency (n = 16). Additionally, patients with the apparent isolated 17,20-lyase deficiency (n = 7, from 6 families) were noted. Residual enzyme activities with the observed mutant enzymes were divided in 2 categories as < 1% and ≥ 1%, each for hydroxylase and lyase. RESULTS: . In the review, the combined severe deficiency was the most common form, with more frequent female sex of rearing, hypertension, hypokalemia, suppressed renin, higher plasma corticotropin, lower serum cortisol, and androgens. Immunoassay-measured serum aldosterone was frequently (68.2%) unsuppressed (>5 ng/dL). Elevated serum progesterone had high sensitivity for diagnosis of combined 17OHD, even in combined partial deficiency (83.3%). Among patients with clinical phenotype of combined severe deficiency, 11.5% had partial 17α-hydroxylase and complete 17,20-lyase deficiency (>1%/<1%) and had significantly higher serum cortisol than those with < 1%/<1% activity. CONCLUSION: We report the first monocentric case series of Asian Indian 46,XY patients with 17OHD. We propose that a phenotype of severe undervirilization with milder cortisol deficiency may represent a distinct subtype of combined severe 17OHD with residual 17α-hydroxylase activity but severe 17,20-lyase deficiency (>1%/<1%), which needs further validation.

Topics & Concepts

21-HydroxylaseInternal medicineMedicineCongenital adrenal hyperplasiaSexual Differentiation and DisordersGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal AbnormalitiesHormonal and reproductive studies