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Featured researches published by Albert L. Shroads.


Pediatrics | 2006

Controlled Clinical Trial of Dichloroacetate for Treatment of Congenital Lactic Acidosis in Children

Peter W. Stacpoole; Douglas S. Kerr; Carie L Barnes; S. Terri Bunch; Paul R. Carney; Eileen M. Fennell; Natalia M. Felitsyn; Robin L. Gilmore; Melvin Greer; George N. Henderson; Alan D. Hutson; Richard E. Neiberger; Ralph G. O'Brien; Leigh Ann Perkins; Ronald G. Quisling; Albert L. Shroads; Jonathan J. Shuster; Janet H. Silverstein; Douglas W. Theriaque; Edward Valenstein

OBJECTIVE. Open-label studies indicate that oral dichloroacetate (DCA) may be effective in treating patients with congenital lactic acidosis. We tested this hypothesis by conducting the first double-blind, randomized, control trial of DCA in this disease. METHODS. Forty-three patients who ranged in age from 0.9 to 19 years were enrolled. All patients had persistent or intermittent hyperlactatemia, and most had severe psychomotor delay. Eleven patients had pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency, 25 patients had 1 or more defects in enzymes of the respiratory chain, and 7 patients had a mutation in mitochondrial DNA. Patients were preconditioned on placebo for 6 months and then were randomly assigned to receive an additional 6 months of placebo or DCA, at a dose of 12.5 mg/kg every 12 hours. The primary outcome results were (1) a Global Assessment of Treatment Efficacy, which incorporated tests of neuromuscular and behavioral function and quality of life; (2) linear growth; (3) blood lactate concentration in the fasted state and after a carbohydrate meal; (4) frequency and severity of intercurrent illnesses and hospitalizations; and (5) safety, including tests of liver and peripheral nerve function. OUTCOME. There were no significant differences in Global Assessment of Treatment Efficacy scores, linear growth, or the frequency or severity of intercurrent illnesses. DCA significantly decreased the rise in blood lactate caused by carbohydrate feeding. Chronic DCA administration was associated with a fall in plasma clearance of the drug and with a rise in the urinary excretion of the tyrosine catabolite maleylacetone and the heme precursor δ-aminolevulinate. CONCLUSIONS. In this highly heterogeneous population of children with congenital lactic acidosis, oral DCA for 6 months was well tolerated and blunted the postprandial increase in circulating lactate. However, it did not improve neurologic or other measures of clinical outcome.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2013

Long-term safety of dichloroacetate in congenital lactic acidosis

Monica Abdelmalak; Alicia Lew; Ryan Ramezani; Albert L. Shroads; Bonnie S. Coats; Taimour Y. Langaee; Meena N. Shankar; Richard E. Neiberger; Sankarasubramon H. Subramony; Peter W. Stacpoole

We followed 8 patients (4 males) with biochemically and/or molecular genetically proven deficiencies of the E1α subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC; 3 patients) or respiratory chain complexes I (1 patient), IV (3 patients) or I+IV (1 patient) who received oral dichloroacetate (DCA; 12.5 mg/kg/12 h) for 9.7 to 16.5 years. All subjects originally participated in randomized controlled trials of DCA and were continued on an open-label chronic safety study. Patients (1 adult) ranged in age from 3.5 to 40.2 years at the start of DCA administration and are currently aged 16.9 to 49.9 years (mean ± SD: 23.5 ± 10.9 years). Subjects were either normal or below normal body weight for age and gender. The 3 PDC deficient patients did not consume high fat (ketogenic) diets. DCA maintained normal blood lactate concentrations, even in PDC deficient children on essentially unrestricted diets. Hematological, electrolyte, renal and hepatic status remained stable. Nerve conduction either did not change or decreased modestly and led to reduction or temporary discontinuation of DCA in 3 patients, although symptomatic worsening of peripheral neuropathy did not occur. We conclude that chronic DCA administration is generally well-tolerated in patients with congenital causes of lactic acidosis and is effective in maintaining normal blood lactate levels, even in PDC-deficient children not consuming strict ketogenic diets.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2003

Population kinetics, efficacy, and safety of dichloroacetate for lactic acidosis due to severe malaria in children.

Tsiri Agbenyega; Timothy Planche; George Bedu-Addo; Daniel Ansong; Alex K. Owusu-Ofori; Venkatesh Atul Bhattaram; Nelamangala V. Nagaraja; Albert L. Shroads; George N. Henderson; Alan D. Hutson; Hartmut Derendorf; Sanjeev Krishna; Peter W. Stacpoole

The authors conducted a randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial of intravenous dichloroacetate (DCA) for the purpose of treating lactic acidosis in 124 West African children with severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Lactic acidosis independently predicts mortality in severe malaria, and DCA stimulates the oxidative removal of lactate in vivo. A single infusion of 50 mg/kg DCA was well tolerated. When administered at the same time as a dose of intravenous quinine, DCA significantly increased the initial rate and magnitude of fall in blood lactate levels and did not interfere with the plasma kinetics of quinine. The authors developed a novel population pharmacokinetic‐pharmacodynamic indirect‐response model for DCA that incorporated characteristics associated with disease reversal. The model describes the complex relationships among antimalarial treatment procedures, plasma DCA concentrations, and the drugs lactate‐lowering effect. DCA significantly reduces the concentration of blood lactate, an independent predictor of mortality in malaria. Its prospective evaluation in affecting mortality in this disorder appears warranted.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2007

Age-Dependent Kinetics and Metabolism of Dichloroacetate: Possible Relevance to Toxicity

Albert L. Shroads; Xu Guo; Vaishali Dixit; Huiping Liu; Margaret O. James; Peter W. Stacpoole

Dichloroacetate (DCA) is an investigational drug for certain metabolic diseases. It is biotransformed principally by the ζ-1 family isoform of glutathione transferase (GSTz1), also known as maleylacetoacetate isomerase (MAAI), which catalyzes the penultimate step in tyrosine catabolism. DCA causes a reversible peripheral neuropathy in several species, including humans. However, recent clinical trials indicate that adults are considerably more susceptible to this adverse effect than children. We evaluated the kinetics and biotransformation of DCA and its effects on tyrosine metabolism in nine patients treated for 6 months with 25 mg/kg/day and in rats treated for 5 days with 50 mg/kg/day. We also measured the activity and expression of hepatic GSTz1/MAAI. Chronic administration of DCA causes a striking age-dependent decrease in its plasma clearance and an increase in its plasma half-life in patients and rats. Urinary excretion of unchanged DCA in rats increases with age, whereas oxalate, an end product of DCA metabolism, shows the opposite trend. Low concentrations of monochloroacetate (MCA), which is known to be neurotoxic, increase as a function of age in the urine of dosed rats. MCA was detectable in plasma only of older animals. Hepatic GSTz1/MAAI-specific activity was inhibited equally by DCA treatment among all age groups, whereas plasma and urinary levels of maleylacetone, a natural substrate for this enzyme, increased with age. We conclude that age is an important variable in the in vivo metabolism and elimination of DCA and that it may account, in part, for the neurotoxicity of this compound in humans and other species.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2001

Population Pharmacokinetics of Intramuscular Quinine in Children with Severe Malaria

Sanjeev Krishna; Nelamangala V. Nagaraja; Tim Planche; Tsiri Agbenyega; George Bedo-Addo; Daniel Ansong; Alex K. Owusu-Ofori; Albert L. Shroads; George N. Henderson; Alan D. Hutson; Hartmut Derendorf; Peter W. Stacpoole

ABSTRACT We present the first population pharmacokinetic analysis of quinine in patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Ghanaian children (n = 120; aged 12 months to 10 years) with severe malaria received an intramuscular loading dose of quinine dihydrochloride (20 mg/kg of body weight). A two-compartment model with first-order absorption and elimination gave post hoc estimates for pharmacokinetic parameters that were consistent with those derived from non-population pharmacokinetic studies (clearance [CL] = 0.05 liter/h/kg of body weight; volume of distribution in the central compartment [V1] = 0.65 liter/kg; volume of distribution at steady state = 1.41 liter/kg; half-life at β phase = 19.9 h). There were no covariates (including age, gender, acidemia, anemia, coma, parasitemia, or anticonvulsant use) that explained interpatient variability in weight-normalized CL and V1. Intramuscular quinine was associated with minor, local toxicity in some patients (13 of 108; 12%), and 11 patients (10%) experienced one or more episodes of postadmission hypoglycemia. A loading dose of intramuscular quinine results in predictable population pharmacokinetic profiles in children with severe malaria and may be preferred to the intravenous route of administration in some circumstances.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2009

Peripheral Neuropathy in Rats Exposed to Dichloroacetate

Nigel A. Calcutt; Veronica L. Lopez; Arjel D. Bautista; Leah M. Mizisin; Brenda R. Torres; Albert L. Shroads; Andrew P. Mizisin; Peter W. Stacpoole

The use of dichloroacetate (DCA) for treating patients with mitochondrial diseases is limited by the induction of peripheral neuropathy. The mechanisms of DCA-induced neuropathy are not known. Oral DCA treatment (50-500 mg/kg per day for up to 16weeks) induced tactile allodynia in both juvenile and adult rats; concurrent thermal hypoalgesia developed at higher doses. Both juvenile and adult rats treated with DCA developed nerve conduction slowing that was more pronounced in adult rats. No overt axonal or glial cell abnormalities were identified in peripheral nerves or spinal cord of any DCA-treated rat, but morphometric analysis identified a reduction of mean axonal caliber of peripheral nerve myelinated fibers. Dichloroacetate treatment also caused accumulation of oxidative stress markers in the nerves. These data indicate that behavioral, functional, and structural indices of peripheral neuropathy may be induced in both juvenile and adult rats treated with DCA at doses similar to those in clinical use. Dichloroacetate-induced peripheral neuropathy primarily afflicts axons and involves both metabolic and structural disorders. The DCA-treated rat may provide insight into the pathogenesis of this peripheral neuropathy and facilitate development of adjuvant therapeutics to prevent this disorder that currently restricts the clinical use of DCA.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008

The heme precursor delta-aminolevulinate blocks peripheral myelin formation.

Natalia M. Felitsyn; Colin McLeod; Albert L. Shroads; Peter W. Stacpoole; Lucia Notterpek

Delta‐aminolevulinic acid (δ‐ALA) is a heme precursor implicated in neurological complications associated with porphyria and tyrosinemia type I. Delta‐ALA is also elevated in the urine of animals and patients treated with the investigational drug dichloroacetate (DCA). We postulated that δ‐ALA may be responsible, in part, for the peripheral neuropathy observed in subjects receiving DCA. To test this hypothesis, myelinating cocultures of Schwann cells and sensory neurons were exposed to δ‐ALA (0.1–1 mM) and analyzed for the expression of neural proteins and lipids and markers of oxidative stress. Exposure of myelinating samples to δ‐ALA is associated with a pronounced reduction in the levels of myelin‐associated lipids and proteins, including myelin protein zero and peripheral myelin protein 22. We also observed an increase in protein carbonylation and the formation of hydroxynonenal and malondialdehyde after treatment with δ‐ALA. Studies of isolated Schwann cells and neurons indicate that glial cells are more vulnerable to this pro‐oxidant than neurons, based on a selective decrease in the expression of mitochondrial respiratory chain proteins in glial, but not in neuronal, cells. These results suggest that the neuropathic effects of δ‐ALA are attributable, at least in part, to its pro‐oxidant properties which damage myelinating Schwann cells.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2012

Human Polymorphisms in the Glutathione Transferase Zeta 1/Maleylacetoacetate Isomerase Gene Influence the Toxicokinetics of Dichloroacetate

Albert L. Shroads; Taimour Y. Langaee; Bonnie S. Coats; Tracie L. Kurtz; John R. Bullock; David Weithorn; Yan Gong; David Wagner; David A. Ostrov; Julie A. Johnson; Peter W. Stacpoole

Dichloroacetate (DCA), a chemical relevant to environmental science and allopathic medicine, is dehalogenated by the bifunctional enzyme glutathione transferase zeta (GSTz1)/maleylacetoacetate isomerase (MAAI), the penultimate enzyme in the phenylalanine/tyrosine catabolic pathway. The authors postulated that polymorphisms in GSTz1/MAAI modify the toxicokinetics of DCA. GSTz1/MAAI haplotype significantly affected the kinetics and biotransformation of 1,2‐13C‐DCA when it was administered at either environmentally (μg/kg/d) or clinically (mg/kg/d) relevant doses. GSTz1/MAAI haplotype also influenced the urinary accumulation of potentially toxic tyrosine metabolites. Atomic modeling revealed that GSTz1/MAAI variants associated with the slowest rates of DCA metabolism induced structural changes in the enzyme homodimer, predicting protein instability or abnormal protein‐protein interactions. Knowledge of the GSTz1/MAAI haplotype can be used prospectively to identify individuals at potential risk of DCAs adverse side effects from environmental or clinical exposure or who may exhibit aberrant amino acid metabolism in response to dietary protein.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2015

Haplotype Variations in Glutathione Transferase Zeta 1 Influence the Kinetics and Dynamics of Chronic Dichloroacetate in Children

Albert L. Shroads; Bonnie S. Coats; Caitrin W. McDonough; Taimour Y. Langaee; Peter W. Stacpoole

Dichloroacetate (DCA) is biotransformed by glutathione transferase zeta 1 (GSTZ1), a bifunctional enzyme that, as maleylacetoacetate isomerase (MAAI), catalyzes the penultimate step in tyrosine catabolism. DCA inhibits GSTZ1/MAAI, leading to delayed plasma drug clearance and to accumulation of potentially toxic tyrosine intermediates. Haplotype variability in GSTZ1 influences short‐term DCA kinetics in healthy adults, but the impact of genotype in children treated chronically with DCA is unknown. Drug kinetics was studied in 17 children and adolescents with congenital mitochondrial diseases administered 1,2‐13C‐DCA. Plasma drug half‐life and trough levels varied 3–6‐fold, depending on GSTZ1/MAAI haplotype and correlated directly with urinary maleylacetone, a substrate for MAAI. However, chronic DCA exposure did not lead to progressive accumulation of plasma drug concentration; instead, kinetics parameters plateaued, consistent with the hypothesis that equipoise is established between the inhibitory effect of DCA on GSTZ1/MAAI and new enzyme synthesis. GSTZ1/MAAI haplotype variability affects DCA kinetics and biotransformation. However, these differences appear to be stable in most individuals and are not associated with DCA plasma accumulation or drug‐associated toxicity in young children.


Journal of Biochemical and Molecular Toxicology | 2013

Pharmacokinetics of Oral Dichloroacetate in Dogs

Herbert W. Maisenbacher; Albert L. Shroads; Guo Zhong; Adam D. Daigle; Monica Abdelmalak; Ivan Sosa Samper; Brandy D. Mincey; Margaret O. James; Peter W. Stacpoole

We characterized the pharmacokinetics and dynamics of dichloroacetate (DCA), an investigational drug for mitochondrial diseases, pulmonary arterial hypertension, and cancer. Adult Beagle dogs were orally administered 6.25 mg/kg q12h DCA for 4 weeks. Plasma kinetics was determined after 1, 14, and 28 days. The activity and expression of glutathione transferase zeta 1 (GSTZ1), which biotransforms DCA to glyoxylate, were determined from liver biopsies at baseline and after 27 days. Dogs demonstrate much slower clearance and greater inhibition of DCA metabolism and GSTZ1 activity and expression than rodents and most humans. Indeed, the plasma kinetics of DCA in dogs is similar to humans with GSTZ1 polymorphisms that confer exceptionally slow plasma clearance. Dogs may be a useful model to further investigate the toxicokinetics and therapeutic potential of DCA.

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Alan D. Hutson

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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