Two individuals with intractable generalized dystonia secondary to glutaric aciduria type 1 (GA1) were treated with continuous intraventricular baclofen (IVB) infusion. On IVB of 220 lg/day, one 10-year-old girl had an 85% reduction in dystonia, from Barry-Albright Dystonia Scale (BADS) score 30.7 to 4.5 (maximum score: 32) at 30 postoperative months. Her enteral dystonia medications were reduced >60%, and she discontinued medications for pain, anxiety, and depression. A second GA1 patient, age 23, experienced a more modest 18% reduction in dystonia (BADS decrease from 29.7 to 24.3) on IVB of 1,665 lg/day at 14 postoperative months. He substantially reduced his enteral dystonia medications and reported meaningful pain relief. These cases demonstrate that IVB may be a palliative option in the intractable dystonia of GA1. Our provisional observations suggest that IVB may be more beneficial in younger GA1 patients.Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (glutaric aciduria type 1; GA1, MIM 231670) is a rare hereditary metabolic disorder that can result in striatal degeneration during early brain development, either precipitated by an infectious illness or presenting as insidious motor delay subsequent to perinatal brain injury. In recent years, advances in dietary therapy have allowed effective prevention of brain injury in more than 90% of asymptomatic children diagnosed by newborn screening. Nevertheless, a large number of adolescent and adult GA1 patients worldwide have irreversible striatal lesions and consequently suffer from chronic, medically intractable dystonia.Pallidotomy and internal pallidal DBS have been attempted in GA1 patients, but compared to their utility in treating primary dystonias have proven minimally effective for relieving the secondary dystonia of GA1 (Table 1). [1][2][3][4] We successfully treated 2 GA1 patients with severe dystonia using intraventricular baclofen (IVB). We based this approach on the work of Albright and Ferson, who pioneered the use of IVB and demonstrated that it is more effective for treating secondary dystonias in children than the intrathecal route of baclofen delivery.5 Importantly, 2 of their study subjects with neurogenetic disorders that share pathophysiological similarities to GA1 (pantothenate kinase deficiency and methylmalonic acidemia) responded well to IVB, with Barry-Albright Dystonia Scale (BADS) scores decreasing by 83% and 100%, respectively. 5 Based on these observations, we implanted IVB catheters in 2 GA1 patients and here report favorable postoperative outcomes. Patient 1A 10-year-old girl presented with generalized dystonia of 8 years' duration. After an uneventful gestation and term delivery, she made good developmental progress until 17 months of age, when she suffered acute striatal lesions during a febrile illness, prompting the diagnosis of GA1. She subsequently
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