Nutrition Management in Children Less than 5 Years of Age with Glycogen Storage Disease Type I: Survey Results
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Description of Care Team
3.2. Formula Selection
3.3. Tube Feedings
3.4. Glucose/Carbohydrate Requirement Estimation
3.5. Initiating UCCS
3.6. Oral Feedings of Solid Food
3.7. Supplementation
3.8. Blood Glucose (BG), Continuous Glucose, and Lactate Monitoring
3.9. Metabolic Control
3.10. Hypoglycemia Management
4. Limitations
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | ACMG [1] | European [6] |
---|---|---|
Formula | Infancy: soy-based, sugar-free formula or sucrose-, fructose-, and lactose-free formula Older children: sucrose-, fructose-, and lactose-free formula or elemental formula with a higher percentage of CHO | Infancy (0–12 months): breastfeeding/lactose-free formula 6–12 months: maltodextrin in formula feeding replaced by rice/corn (up to 6%) |
Infant Feeding Interval | Every 2–3 h | Every 2–3 h |
Nighttime feeds | When sleeping > 3–4 h: wake every 3–4 h, monitor BG, and offer feedings or use OGFs | 0–12 months: OGFs or frequent feedings 1–3 years: OGFs or UCCS every 4 h 3–6 years: OGFs or UCCS every 4–6 h |
Rate of continuous feeds | Infancy: 8–10 mg glucose/kg/min Older children: 4–8 mg glucose/kg/min | 0–12 months: 7–9 mg glucose/kg/min 1–3 years: 6–8 mg glucose/kg/min 3–6 years: 6–7 mg glucose/kg/min |
Start/ discontinuation of overnight feeds | Feed immediately after disconnecting or feed first and wait 30 min before disconnecting | Start within 1 h of the last meal, otherwise give a small oral or bolus feed Within 15 min after discontinuation, a feed should be given |
Other GT | Risk with type Ib | Contraindicated with type Ib |
Solid food introduction | Start at 4–6 months with infant cereals, followed by vegetables and then meat Limit or omit fruit, juice, and other sucrose-, fructose-, and lactose-containing foods Normal feeding progression with spoon feeding, drinking from a cup, and the introduction of table foods | |
Cornstarch introduction | No consensus regarding cornstarch initiation, often trialed at 6 months to 1 year Start with a small dose and gradually increase to improve tolerance | >1 year Starting dose of 0.25 g/kg BW; increase dose slowly |
Uncooked cornstarch dose | Young children: 1.6 g CS per kg BW (IBW) every 3–4 h Older children: 1.7–2.5 g CS per kg BW every 4–5 h, sometimes 6 h Ideally measured on a gram scale, otherwise with a tablespoon Additional guidance re: brand and mixing | 1–3 years: 1–1.5 g/kg/dose every 4 h 3–6 years: 1.5–2 g/kg/dose every 4–6 h |
Caloric distribution | CHO: 60–70%, high complex CHO PRO: 10–15% (for DRI) FAT: remaining calories (<30% if >2 years) | CHO: 60–65% PRO: 10–15% FAT: remaining calories (preferably vegetable oils with high linoleic acid) |
Restriction/ elimination | No consensus regarding restriction of sucrose (fructose and glucose) or lactose (galactose and glucose), but often limited or avoided | Lactose, fructose, and sucrose restricted except for fruits, vegetables, and (small amounts of) milk products |
Multivitamin/ mineral supplementation | Complete multivitamin with minerals Sugar-free soy-based milk fortified with calcium and vitamin D or calcium and vitamin D supplements | Follow dietary plan to provide essential nutrients, assess calcium and vitamin D intake, adequate vitamin B1, iron supplementation if needed |
Team Member | Number of Clinics | Years of Experience |
---|---|---|
Dietitian | 21 | >10 years: 7 5–10 years: 10 1–5 years: 4 |
Physician | 20 | Not asked |
Nurse practitioner Physician assistant | 8 | |
Genetic counselor | 11 | |
Nurse/case manager | 6 | |
Support staff | 8 |
Formula Selection | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Infant formula | |
Sucrose, lactose free (Prosobee®) | 17/21 (81%) |
Hypoallergenic, sucrose, lactose-free (Nutramigen®) | 9/21 (43%) |
Hypoallergenic, amino acid-based, lactose-free (Alfamino®) | 7/21 (33%) |
Formula with sucrose (Isomil®) | 5/21 (24%) |
Breast feeding not recommended | 16/21 (76%) |
Children (1–5 years of age) | |
Elemental, high-carbohydrate, 2% fat (Tolerex®) | 9/21 (43%) |
Peptide-based (PediaSure Peptide Unflavored ®) | 7/21 (33%) |
Elemental (Vivonex Pediatric®) | 6/21 (29%) |
Time-Interval | <12 Months | 13–24 Months | 25–36 Months | 37–48 Months | 49–60 Months |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 h | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1–1.5 h | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
1.5–2 h | 15 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
2–2.5 h | 5 | 9 | 10 | 6 | 3 |
2.5–3 h | 1 | 4 | 9 | 12 | 14 |
Other | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 |
Age of Introduction | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
6–9 months | 7/21 (33%) |
9–12 months | 9/21 (43%) |
>12 months | 5/21 (24%) |
Time of Day | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Nighttime | 6/21 (29%) |
Daytime | 5/21 (24%) |
Food Group | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Vegetables | 19/21 (90%) |
Meats | 10/21 (48%) |
Cereals | 5/21 (24%) |
Barrier | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Lack of Interest | 19/21 (90%) |
Gagging | 12/21 (57%) |
Oral motor dysfunction | 8/21 (38%) |
* Multivitamins | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Meet deficiencies | 10/19 (53%) |
Case-by-case | 3/19 (16%) |
Routinely prescribed | 2/19 (11%) |
Probiotics | |
GSD Ia | 4/21 (19%) |
GSD Ib | 10/21 (48%) |
Finger Stick BG Monitoring | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Freestyle Lite© | 14/21 (67%) |
Continuous Glucose Monitoring | |
Dexcom© | 13/21 (62%) |
Libre© | 6/21 (29%) |
CGM Education | Number of Clinics |
---|---|
Physician | 9/21 (43%) |
NP/PA | 7/21 (33%) |
RD | 8/21 (38%) |
RN | 3/21 (14%) |
Endocrine Staff | 5/21 (24%) |
Device Staff | 2/21 (10%) |
Barriers | |
Lack of insurance coverage | 10/21 (48%) |
Lack of correlation | 4/21 (19%) |
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Sowa, M.; Boyer, M.; Green, J.; Pendyal, S.; Saavedra, H. Nutrition Management in Children Less than 5 Years of Age with Glycogen Storage Disease Type I: Survey Results. Nutrients 2024, 16, 3244. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16193244
Sowa M, Boyer M, Green J, Pendyal S, Saavedra H. Nutrition Management in Children Less than 5 Years of Age with Glycogen Storage Disease Type I: Survey Results. Nutrients. 2024; 16(19):3244. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16193244
Chicago/Turabian StyleSowa, Mary, Monica Boyer, Jessica Green, Surekha Pendyal, and Heather Saavedra. 2024. "Nutrition Management in Children Less than 5 Years of Age with Glycogen Storage Disease Type I: Survey Results" Nutrients 16, no. 19: 3244. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16193244
APA StyleSowa, M., Boyer, M., Green, J., Pendyal, S., & Saavedra, H. (2024). Nutrition Management in Children Less than 5 Years of Age with Glycogen Storage Disease Type I: Survey Results. Nutrients, 16(19), 3244. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16193244