Abstract
Introduction
X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is a metabolic disorder in which very long chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) are accumulated in the nervous system and adrenal cortex, impairing their functions. Three main variants are described in males: adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), a cerebral form (cALD or cAMN) and Addison's disease only (AD), while for females no classification is used. To evaluate pain and the functional state of afferent fibers, a series of tests was carried out in male and female patients.
Methods
Chronic pain occurrence and sensory phenotype profile were assessed in 30 patients (20 male: 10 AMN, 1 cAMN, 1 cALD, 8 AD; and 10 female). A set of instruments assessed the intensity, quality and extent of pain, while a battery of quantitative sensory testing (QST) procedures examined the functional status of Aβ and Aδ fibers. Principal component analysis and hierarchical clustering with sensory responses input were used to identify distinct clusters.
Results
Nearly half of the subjects reported pain, with a high prevalence in females and male AMN patients. No sex differences in pain dimensions were found. The sensory responses were heterogeneous, differing among the clinical variants and between genders. Male AMN/cAMN/cALD patients showed the worst impairment. Aβ and Aδ fibers were affected in males and females, but Aβ fibers appeared undamaged in females when tactile sensitivity was tested. Abnormal responses were localized in the lower body district, according to the dying-back pattern of the neuropathy. Cluster analysis showed discrete clusters for each function examined, with well-interpretable sensory and clinical phenotypes.
Conclusion
The study of pain and of the sensory profile appears to indicate a difference in the mechanisms underlying the AMN/cAMN/cALD and AD clinical forms and in the treatment of the respective generated pain types.
Supplementary Information
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40122-021-00245-0.
Keywords: ALD, Pain, QST, Sex differences
Key Summary Points
Why carry out this study? |
Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is an X-linked disorder mostly affecting the nervous system and adrenal cortex, often giving rise to chronic pain. Nevertheless, pain studies on ALD patients are rare. |
It was hypothesized that administering specific questionnaires and sensory testing (QST) would highlight characteristics of the pain phenotype and mechanisms. |
What was learned from the study? |
Pain prevailed in females and AMN (adrenomyeloneuropathy) subjects; Aβ and Aδ fibers responded differently in the neural forms and the Addison's variant and in males with respect to females, all aberrant responses being located in the lower limbs. |
Pain and sensory phenotype varied based on the primary pathological disorder mechanisms, localization and gender. |
Digital Features
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Introduction
Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is an X-linked inherited metabolic disease caused by mutations in the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter subfamily D member 1 gene (ABCD1) which encodes for a peroxisomal transmembrane protein involved in the transport of very long chain fatty acids (VLCFA) from cytosol into peroxisomes, where they undergo β-oxidation [1, 2]. Abnormal accumulation of VLCFA is ubiquitous, but the nervous system, adrenal cortex and testis are mainly affected [1, 3]. The excess of VLCFA and the development of molecular and metabolic alterations cause different functional impairment in the tissues, and the downstream mechanisms dictating the signature and severity of the disease are still largely unclear [4–7]. The clinical phenotype is heterogeneous, although three major variants have been described. Addison's disease only (AD) is characterized by decreased cortisol production and release, and thus by adrenal insufficiency [8, 9]. Adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) involves a progressive axonopathy affecting sensory ascending and motor descending spinal tracts as well as peripheral nerves, which causes sensory and motor disturbances [5, 6, 8]. Cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (cALD), or cerebral adrenomyeloneuropathy (cAMN), is marked by myelin destabilization and serious neuroinflammation [1, 5, 6, 8], giving rise to severe cognitive, behavioral and neurological dysfunctions. Sixty-six percent of AMN patients present adrenal involvement [8], while 35% [10, 11] progress towards an overt cerebral inflammatory form.
Signs and symptoms of the disease have been described in males and also in females, so-called carriers. Nevertheless, depending on the studies, 50% or more of such women present some neurological anomaly, 57% manifest a peripheral neuropathy and 63% develop a late progressive myelopathy [12, 13]. Both large and small nerve fiber dysfunction has been described in AMN-like females [8, 14] and in AMN males [15–17]. The changes involving the sensory system are frequently accompanied by pain, defined as neuropathic due to the injury or disease affecting the neural structures [18].
Quantitative sensory testing (QST) was developed to study different aspects of the sensory system. Stimuli with defined properties are administered and the quality and magnitude of the evoked responses are analyzed [19, 20] in order to ascertain the functional status of the activated neural pathway, the occurrence of any sensory disturbance and its localization. This procedure also identifies signs of plus or minus sensory functioning, i.e. hyperesthesia and hypoesthesia. Based on these characteristics, QST has been used in various clinical conditions [21–24]. The clinical features of the neural variants (AMN/cAMN/cALD) of the disease consist of a progressive impairment of nervous system functions, with both central and peripheral damage. Although an objective description of the sensory profile would enable a better definition of the pathology, its time course and body distribution pattern, we are unaware of studies in which a systematic sensory investigation has been performed.
The aim of the present study on X-ALD subjects was to evaluate pain and the functional state (correct functioning or disturbance) of afferent fibers in well-defined body areas. Particular attention was given to the presence of latent or subclinical dysfunctions in the female “carriers” and the body distribution of these dysfunctions.
Methods
Subjects and Experimental Procedures
The study enrolled biochemically and genetically proven ALD patients (20 male and 10 female) regularly followed up at the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital (Rome, Italy) and the IRCCS C. Besta Neurological Institute Foundation (Milan, Italy). Selection of subjects was random among patients who complied with the study protocol. The study adhered to the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the local ethics committees of the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital and the IRRCS C. Besta Neurological Institute Foundation; all the patients and their parents or guardians gave their written informed consent to use their clinical data in anonymized form (Mod.CUP_02consinf_15/07/2003 and subsequent amendments).
Male patients were divided into the following clinical forms: adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), cerebral AMN (cAMN), cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (cALD) and Addison's disease only (AD). The criteria used for the classification of the patients with neurological symptoms (i.e. AMN, cAMN and cALD patients) were based on clinical and MRI findings, in agreement with previous classification [25, 26]. Patients were considered as AD when they had adrenal failure only, and no anti-adrenal antibody was detectable [27]. Adrenal failure was considered when ACTH plasma levels were higher than 65 pg/ml and morning cortisol levels lower than 14 mcg/dl [3]. Female patients included both symptomatic and asymptomatic cases, as indicated in Table 1. A female was considered symptomatic when she had any neurological symptom/sign compatible with the diagnosis of ALD, including progressive spastic paraparesis, sensory deficits and bladder dysfunction [12].
Table 1.
Patients | Age (years) | Mutation | Amino acid substitution | VLCFA (μmol/l) | C26/C22 | C24/C22 | Clinical phenotype | Chronic pain | Cluster: tactile | Cluster: pain threshold | Cluster: algometer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Males | |||||||||||
1 | 17 | c.1885 | p.Asp629Asn | 1.80 | 0.076 | 1.47 | AD | n.a. | 1 | 2 | |
5 | 64 | c1381delT | p.Leu461fs | 1.52 | 0.066 | 1.52 | AMN | Burning, sharp in the legs; N and M | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
6 | 62 | c.2600A>G | p.his669arg | 3.05 | 0.085 | 1.83 | AMN | 2 | 2 | 1 | |
7 | 15 | c.686T>C | p.Leu229Pro | 1.62 | 0.074 | 1.02 | AD | 3 | 2 | 1 | |
7G | 10 | c.686T>C | p.Leu229Pro | 2.82 | 0.076 | 2.04 | AD | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
8 | 35 | 813C>T | P143Ser | 3.13 | 0.096 | 1.85 | AMN | Tingling, electric shock, feet, N | n.a. | 2 | 1 |
9 | 54 | c.1252C>T | p.Arg418Trp | 3.51 | 0.080 | 1. 85 | AMN | 4 | 2 | 2 | |
10 | 40 | c.14141416del2 | p.Glu471fs | 4. 53 | 0.16 | 2.24 | AMN | 4 | 1 | 2 | |
11 | 20 | c.4422444del3(ACC) | ins6(TGTTGA) | 1. 80 | 0.063 | 1.50 | AD | Headache | 2 | 2 | 1 |
12 | 31 | c.14151416del2 | p.Glu471fs | 2.39 | 0.072 | 1.14 | AMN | 1 | 2 | 1 | |
13 | 40 | c.994C>T | p.Gln332X | 1.95 | 0.05 | 1.36 | cAMN | 4 | 1 | 2 | |
14 | 54 | c.1540A>C | p.Ser514Arg | 1.50 | 0.04 | 1.07 | AMN | Burning feet and legs N | 1 | 1 | 2 |
16 | 40 | I657del (ATC) | 3.59 | 0.061 | 1.55 | AMN | Burning, ulcer, dystrophic tissue in legs, N and No | 3 | 2 | 2 | |
17 | 43 | I657del (ATC) | 3.52 | 0.074 | 1.63 | AMN | 1 | 2 | 2 | ||
18 | 37 | c.1406delA | p.Asp469fs | 1.91 | 0.094 | 1.72 | AD | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
19 | 53 | c.14151416 del2 | p.Glu471fs | 3.76 | 0.11 | 1.99 | AMN | Headache, tingling, burning feet, N | 2 | 1 | 2 |
20 | 33 | c.1202G>A | p.Arg401Gln | 2.51 | 0.039 | 1.48 | AD | 4 | 1 | 2 | |
21 | 23 | c.560P>L | p.Pro560Leu | 1.33 | 0.041 | 1.12 | AD | 3 | 1 | 2 | |
22 | 20 | c.560P>L | p.Pro560Leu | 1.84 | 0.07 | 1.41 | AD | 3 | 1 | 2 | |
23 | 12 | c.1628 C>T | p.P543L | 2.02 | 0.056 | 1.17 | cALD | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
Mean | 2.51 ± 0.21 | 0.07 ± 0.006 | 1.55 ± 0.08 | 6/20 = 30% | |||||||
Females | |||||||||||
2 | 46 | c.1885 | p.Asp629Asn | 3.75 | 0.056 | 1.04 | Symptomatic | Headache, post-surgical | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
3 | 48 | c.1978C > T | p.Arg660Trp | 1.03 | 0.042 | 0.86 | Symptomatic | Persistent burning, sciatic, N, M | 1 | n.a. | 1 |
4 | 22 | c.1978C>T | p.Arg660Trp | 1.49 | 0.031 | 1.22 | Asymptomatic | 2 | 2 | 1 | |
15 | 61 | c.994C>T | p.Gln332x | 1.86 | 0.04 | 1.22 | Symptomatic | During walking, legs N and M, headache | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
24 | 68 | c.427C>G | p.Pro143Ala | 2.51 | 0.046 | 1.266 | Symptomatic | Leg, N | 3 | n.a. | n.a. |
25 | 48 | c.1772G>A | p.Arg591Gln | 2.70 | 0.056 | 0.957 | Symptomatic | Headache, low back pain, legs, N | 4 | n.a. | 1 |
26 | 65 | c.1992G>A | p.Trp664* | 3.08 | 0.056 | 1.132 | Symptomatic | Headache, head, neck, N, M | 1 | n.a. | 1 |
27 | 58 | c. 1202G>A | p. Arg401Gln | 1.63 | 0.042 | 1.129 | Symptomatic | Low back pain, legs, N | 1 | 2 | 1 |
28 | 58 | c.443A>G, | p.Asn148Ser | 1.66 | 0.014 | 1.231 | Asymptomatic | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
29 | 51 | c.1540A>C | p.Ser514 | n.a. | 0.038 | 1.35 | Symptomatic | Diffuse, burning, arms, legs, N, M | 4 | 2 | 1 |
Mean | 2.19 ± 0.29 | 0.05 ± 0.003 | 1.13 ± 0.05 | 8/10 = 80% |
Summary of patients’ age, mutation, VLCFA levels and ratio, clinical phenotype (AD, Addison's disease only; AMN, adrenomyeloneuropathy; cAMN, cerebral AMN; cALD, cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy), chronic pain description (N: neuropathic pain, No: nociceptive pain, M: musculoskeletal pain), and cluster in which a patient could be included for each sensory modality (n.a.: not applicable)
The evaluation session lasted about 2 h. In all male and female subjects, a semi-structured interview was conducted to determine the clinical status, disease onset and evolution; the patient’s past (during the last 3 months) and present pain, the pain intensity and quality, and its extension and distribution were estimated by means of specific instruments, respectively, visual analog scale (VAS), Italian Pain Questionnaire (QUID) and Margolis Pain Diagram. A quantitative sensory testing (QST) battery was used to assess thermal and tactile sensitivity and measure mechanical (painful, non-painful, superficial and deep) thresholds, intensity of evoked pain and their distribution in the upper and lower parts of the body. The wind-up test was also applied by means of the von Frey filament method to evaluate the excitability of the CNS.
Instruments and Measurements
Visual Analog Scale (VAS)
VAS is a 10-cm horizontal line bounded at the extremes by “no pain” and “worst pain possible” which measures the intensity of pain (0–10). Subjects were asked to place a cross on the horizontal line at the point that represented the highest pain intensity perceived.
The Italian Pain Questionnaire (QUID)
QUID [28] estimates the quality and intensity of pain. It is a semantic interval scale consisting of 42 descriptors divided into four main classes: sensory, affective, evaluative, miscellaneous. The Pain Rating Index rank value (PRIr) for each dimension and for the whole experience (Pain Rating Index rank-Total—PRIr-T) is given by the sum of scores each descriptor represents. The instrument also incorporates a five-point adjective scale to measure the present pain intensity (PPI) (0–5).
Margolis Pain Diagram
The Margolis pain diagram [29] weights the extension and distribution of pain, expressed as the percentage of body surface in pain and its location. The tool consists of a dorsal and a ventral drawing of the body. The subjects are asked to shade areas in which they have experienced pain.
Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST)
Six modalities of stimulation, both innocuous (i.e. thermal, light tactile sensation, mechanical detection threshold) and noxious (i.e. mechanical pain threshold, pressure pain threshold), were administered. Moreover, the wind-up phenomenon was tested in all patients.
In particular:
The thermal test was performed by letting a drop of acetone fall on each body point [30]. An approximately 50 μl drop of room temperature acetone (Zeta Farmaceutici, Vicenza, Italy) was applied from a 1 ml syringe.
Light tactile test was carried out by gentle brushing with cotton wool along 2 cm of the skin at each point [19, 20].
The mechanical detection threshold (MDT) was determined using a standardized set of von Frey filaments (Semmes Weinstein, Stoelting Co.) exerting forces from 0.078 to 588.235 mN (size 1.65–5.88), the contact area of the probe being uniform and flat. Each filament was applied to the skin in ascending order at a 90° angle with sufficient force to bend or bow the filament and was held in place for 1.5 s and then removed. Patients were instructed to indicate when a stimulus was felt [19, 20].
The mechanical pain threshold (MPT) was assessed using von Frey filaments (Semmes Weinstein, Stoelting Co.) exerting forces from 980.392 to 2941.176 mN (size 6.10–6.65), purposely modified (the contact area was reduced to 0.2 mm diameter) to induce pain. Filaments were applied to the skin in ascending order until the first perception of pain was reached. The patient’s sensitivity to the pinprick pain was evaluated by considering the applied force (mN) and the intensity of pain perceived (VAS 0–10) [19, 20, 31].
The pressure pain threshold (PPT) was performed with a graded algometer (Forced Dial FDK 20, Wagner Instruments, Greenwich, CT, USA) whose probe area was exerting a pressure up to 10 kg. The measurement was stopped when the subject indicated that the stimulus became painful or when the pressure reached 5 kg. The patient’s sensitivity to the pressure pain was assessed by reporting the applied force (kg) and the intensity of pain perceived (VAS 0–10) [19, 20, 31].
Wind-up test. A single pinprick stimulus whose force was equal to the value found in the MPT test was administered on an area of 1 cm2 on the volar surface of the non-dominant arm, after which a series of 10 stimuli was applied at 1/s rate [19, 20]. The wind-up magnitude was calculated as the difference between the intensity of pain evoked by the single stimulus (VAS 0–10) and the pain intensity elicited over the whole series [32].
A trained investigator (VB) administered the QST battery in a quiet environment with the patient lying quietly. Tests were always given in the same order, as reported above, and the researcher waited 30 s between tests to avoid temporal summation. QST was performed within all body areas (e.g. trunk, upper and lower extremities). Twenty body points (10 per side symmetrically located on the right and left, Fig. 1) were tested starting from the upper part of the body and moving to the feet [33]. The subjects had to report the sensation felt when the stimulus was applied.
Prior to the sensory testing, subjects were informed about the procedure and the ability to stop it at any time.
Statistical Analysis
The descriptive analysis was carried out on all subjects. Data are reported as mean ± SEM. The normal distribution of the data was verified by the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. Comparisons were performed with one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) with the factor Sex (two levels: male, female) or the factor Group (two levels: AD males, AMN/cAMN/cALD males) depending on the measures to be analyzed.
For each QST determination, an agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis was used with a between-group average linkage aggregation technique to identify clusters of patients with homogeneous characteristics. In the agglomerative hierarchical clustering, the analyzed N statistical units were joined together iteratively, starting with N clusters, each consisting of a single unit and ending with a single cluster. The Euclidean distance was used to determine the distance between pairs of elements. Pearson correlation, which measures the degree of linear relationship between two profiles, was applied. The average linkage clustering was chosen in order to obtain clusters of patients on average well separated from the other clusters, emphasizing the homogeneity of their characteristics (QST features). For pain tests, correlations (Pearson’s parametric and Spearman’s non-parametric) between threshold values and VAS scores were analyzed for each identified cluster separately.
A 95% level of statistical significance was used for all statistical analyses, performed using SPSS version 10 software.
Results
During the 2-year observation period, 20 males and 10 females with the ALD/ABCD1-related phenotype were studied. Table 1 shows the patient demographics, the mutations observed, VLCFA levels, the clinical phenotype, the presence of pain and the cluster in which patients were included for each sensory modality. Ten males were affected by adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), one by cerebral adrenomyeloneuropathy (cAMN), one by cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (cALD) and eight by Addison's disease only (AD). No specific diagnosis was made for the females.
The patients’ mean age was 35.15 (range 10–64) years for males and 52.5 (range 22–68) years for females. AMN/cAMN were significantly older than AD (44.8 ± 14.0 vs. 22.2 ± 7.7; p < 0.002). All males were symptomatic, whereas 8 of the 10 females were symptomatic, with varying degrees of myelopathy signs. While most of the males were under treatment (i.e. cortisone, glycerol trioleate/erucic acid and conjugate linoleic acid mixture, etc.), the females were all drug-free.
Subjects differed greatly in age, years since onset of the disease, clinical variant and degree of patient collaboration. In a few patients, the severity of the disorder did not allow completion of the testing procedure; thus, for some measurements there were missing values, accordingly different numbers of subjects entered the cluster analysis. The male data were analyzed based on the clinical form.
Very Long Chain Fatty Acid (VLCFA)
VLCFA determined in all subjects according to standard procedures [34] are reported in Table 2. One-way ANOVA applied to C24/C22 and C26/C22 ratios revealed a significant effect of the factor Sex (F(1,27) = 11.79, p < 0.001 and F(1,27) = 9.26, p < 0.005, respectively) due to the higher values present in males than in females. No differences were found in the ratios between male patients suffering from AMN/cAMN/cALD (n = 12) and AD (n = 8), although there was a strong tendency towards higher values in the former group (Table 2).
Table 2.
Males | Females (µmol/l) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
All males (µmol/l) | AD (µmol/l) | AMN/cAMN/cALD (µmol/l) | ||
VLCFA | 2.5 ± 0.2 | 2.0 ± 0.5 | 2.9 ± 0.9 | 2.19 ± 0.29 |
C24/C22 | 1.5 ± 0.1 | 1.7 ± 0.3 | 1.6 ± 0.4 | 1.13 ± 0.05** |
C26/C22 | 0.07 ± 0.01 | 0.07 ± 0.02 | 0.08 ± 0.03 | 0.05 ± 0.003** |
C24/C22 and C26/C22 ratios were compared
**p < 0.01 vs. other sex same ratio
Pain Features
As reported in Table 1, pain was reported by 14/30 (46.7%) patients: 6/20 male (30%, 1 AD, 5 AMN) and 8/10 female (80%). In both sexes, pain would be defined as “classical” neuropathic pain in some cases, while in others it was due to various abnormal motor dysfunctions, as side effects of the disease. All pain indices (VAS, QUIDtot,s,a,e, Margolis) except QUIDm were slightly higher (i.e. worse) in females than in males (Table 3), but no significant differences were found. One AD subject (#11, Table 1) recalled having felt minimal pain when he suffered a traumatic injury of the brachial plexus and during the postoperative period after surgical repair. Another patient (AMN, #19, Table 1) reported burning pain in the legs where there were altered perfusion areas, edema and dystrophic changes of the tissue with ulcers.
Table 3.
Instruments | All | Males | Females | p |
---|---|---|---|---|
VAS | 5.9 ± 2.4 | 5.5 ± 1.9 | 6.1 ± 2.9 | ns |
QUID tot | 14.4 ± 4.7 | 14 ± 6.3 | 14.8 ± 3.6 | ns |
QUID sensory | 7.7 ± 3.1 | 7.0 ± 3.0 | 8.3 ± 3.3 | ns |
QUID affective | 1.7 ± 1.3 | 1.5 ± 1.6 | 1.9 ± 1.1 | ns |
QUID evaluative | 4.4 ± 3.2 | 4.3 ± 3.8 | 4.4 ± 3.0 | ns |
QUID miscellaneous | 0.6 ± 1.1 | 1.2 ± 1.3 | 0.3 ± 0.7 | ns |
QUID PPI | 1.0 ± 0.9 | 1.2 ± 1.0 | 0.9 ± 1.0 | ns |
Margolis % | 21.3 ± 15.0 | 19.7 ± 11.9 | 22.5 ± 17.7 | ns |
Intensity (VAS), quality (QUID) and extent (Margolis) of pain in males and females. ANOVA was carried out between male and female groups. Differences were considered significant with p < 0.05
ns not significant
Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST)
QST was carried out in all patients; in most cases, all 100 QST data (5 tests × 20 body points) for the various tests were obtained for each patient. For these data, males and females were considered together because a preliminary statistical comparison, using the Mann–Whitney test, did not reveal significant differences.
QST: Thermal Sensation
All patients completed the test. The drop of acetone administered to the different points induced abnormal sensations in 13/20 males (65%, 9 AMN, 1 cAMN, 1 cALD, 2 AD) and 6/10 females (60%). In particular, eight males (40%, 6 AMN, 1 cAMN, 1 cALD) and four females (40%) did not feel any sensation, one male (AMN) and one female reported a mixture of sensations ranging from a faint perception to no perception, two males (AMN) mentioned a weak sensation, and two males (AD) and one female were unable to identify what they perceived. In addition, one male (AMN, #5, Table 1) and one female experienced allodynia; in particular, the male subject reported burning pain in an area distant from the stimulated point. The sensory abnormalities were always in the lower extremities. The remaining 7/20 males (1 AMN, 6 AD) and 4/10 females reported normal sensation at all points.
QST: Light Tactile Sensation
The tactile test was carried out in all subjects at each point. Light brushing of the points with cotton wool evoked an abnormal sensation in 7/20 males (35%, 5 AMN, 1 cAMN, 1 cALD). In particular, five subjects (4 AMN, 1 cAMN) did not detect the stimulus, one AMN had a very weak perception and one cALD felt mixed sensory abnormalities, i.e. no sensation at some points, an ambiguous sensation at others. Among those who did not perceive the stimulus, one subject (AMN #5, Table 1) complained of burning pain in a distant area also after this kind of stimulation. The sensory abnormalities were always in the lower extremities. The remaining 13 males and all the females showed normal light tactile sensations.
QST: von Frey Mechanical Detection Threshold (MDT)
All patients underwent the test, although it was not completed in five males and two females. The size of the probe able to evoke the sensation varied greatly from one subject to another; for example, on the right foot external point, it ranged from 2.44 to 5.88 in males and 2.44 to 5.56 in females. Male subjects suffering from AMN/cAMN/cALD always showed a higher threshold than the AD, and the difference was significant at 10 points (Table 4).
Table 4.
Point | AD | AMN/cAMN/cALD | p < |
---|---|---|---|
lumb-R | 3.29 ± 3.3 | 33.8 ± 42.2 | 0.05 |
leg-lat-R | 3.35 ± 3.1 | 154.0 ± 248 | 0.02 |
leg-lat-L | 4.2 ± 2.8 | 96.4 ± 187.5 | 0.01 |
leg-ant-R | 3.3 ± 3.0 | 60.3 ± 80.7 | 0.02 |
leg-ant-L | 3.6 ± 3.0 | 52.8 ± 75.1 | 0.01 |
leg-post-R | 2.9 ± 2.1 | 89.0 ± 172.3 | 0.02 |
leg-post-L | 4.3 ± 2.6 | 96.2 ± 179.6 | 0.02 |
f-ext-L | 2.3 ± 2.1 | 49.9 ± 81.9 | 0.02 |
f-int-R | 2.4 ± 2.0 | 90.3 ± 181.4 | 0.03 |
f-int-L | 2.1 ± 1.9 | 45.1 ± 81.4 | 0.01 |
Values at the 10 points where the difference between AD and AMN/cAMN/cALD male patients was significant (ANOVA, p < 0.05). Points: leg, anterior (leg-ant); lumbar (lumb); leg, lateral (leg-lat); leg, posterior (leg-post); foot, external (f-ext); foot, internal (f-int)
L left, R right
The MDT measurements recorded in all males and females were used in a cluster analysis, which allowed the identification of four homogeneous groups of patients with distinct, well-interpretable threshold profiles (see values from one representative point in Fig. 2 and median values for each cluster in S1 Table). The first cluster had six patients, three male (all AMN) and three female. MDT values greatly increased from the trunk to the feet, and were extremely high in the lower limbs, indicating strong hyposensitivity to this type of stimulus. The second cluster had three males (2 AMN, 1 AD) and one female; in these subjects the MDT values at the foot external points were extremely low, indicating hypersensitivity to the punctiform tactile stimulus. The third cluster had five subjects, four male (3 AD and 1 AMN) and one female. In this group the mechanical threshold recorded on the left and right side coincided until the knee. Below the knee, the values of the ipsilateral and contralateral points differed, although for each side the values at all three points were very similar. The fourth cluster had six subjects, four male (2 AMN, 1 cAMN, 1 AD) and two female. The MDT values of the left and right side were the same, except for those at the forearm dorsal surface, leg posterior and foot external points; for the last point, the value on the left side was very low, suggesting high sensitivity to the stimulus.
There were no significant differences among clusters based on age, type of mutation or blood VLCFA amount.
Table 5 reports the distribution within each cluster of the patients with abnormal sensations evoked by thermal and light tactile stimuli. Moreover, the table includes the number of patients with chronic pain belonging to each cluster.
Table 5.
Cluster | von Frey MDT Cluster 1 vs. cluster 2 |
Males/females | Thermal | Light touch | Pain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Higher threshold (HYPOSENSITIVE) |
Males Females |
2/3 no sensation 2/3 no sensation |
2/3 no sensation 0/3 alterations |
1/3 3/3 |
2 | Lower threshold (HYPERSENSITIVE) |
Males Females |
1/3 no sensation 1/3 alterations 0/1 alterations |
1/3 no sensation 0/1 alterations |
2/3 0/1 |
3 |
Males Females |
2/4 alterations 1/1 no sensation |
0/4 alterations 0/1 alterations |
1/4 1/1 |
|
4 |
Males Females |
2/4 no sensation 2/4 light sensation 2/2 no sensation |
2/4 no sensation 0/2 alterations |
0/4 2/2 |
Characteristics of the patients’ sensory profiles in each cluster. Data are reported as frequency/total number of patients in the cluster. No sensation: the patient did not report any perception; Alterations: the patient reported an abnormal response
QST: von Frey Mechanical Pain Threshold (MPT)
All patients underwent the test, although it was not completed in five males and two females. Twenty-five subjects (16 male, 9 female) reported pain when the von Frey filaments (size 6.10–6.65) were applied to the tested points; out of these, seven males (5 AMN, 1cAMN, 1 AD) and two females did not report pain at some points, and four males (1 AMN, 3 AD [#20, 21, 22, Table 1]) and one female did not report pain at any point. In patients in which pain was reported, its intensity was usually low (VAS 1–3), being high (VAS 7–8) in only a few cases.
The cluster analysis of MPT values and the corresponding VAS scores revealed two homogeneous clusters of patients with distinct characteristics (median, 2S Table): the first cluster included eight males (4 AD [#1, 20, 21, 22, Table 1], 3 AMN, 1 cAMN), while the second cluster had eight males (4 AD, 4 AMN) and three females. At all points, MPT values were higher in cluster 1 than in cluster 2, whereas the VAS scores were lower in cluster 1 than in cluster 2.
Table 6 shows the distribution of the patients with abnormal sensations evoked by thermal and tactile stimuli within the two clusters obtained with MPT/VAS; the table also includes the number of patients suffering chronic pain. There were no significant differences among clusters based on age, type of mutation or blood VLCFA amount.
Table 6.
Cluster | von Frey MPT Cluster 1 vs. cluster 2 |
Males/females | Thermal | Light touch | Pain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Higher threshold Lower VAS (HYPOALGESIC) |
Males Females |
2/8 no sensation 2/8 light sensation |
3/8 no sensation | 2/8 |
2 |
Lower threshold Higher VAS (HYPERALGESIC) |
Males Females |
4/8 no sensation 1/3 no sensation |
1/8 no sensation 1/8 light sensation 0/3 no sensation |
3/8 2/3 |
Characteristics of the patients’ sensory profile in each cluster. No females were present in cluster 1
QST: Algometer Pressure Pain Threshold (PPT)
Twenty-eight patients (20 male and 8 female) underwent the test, although it was not completed in five males. Twenty-six of them presented a PPT, while in nine males (5 AMN, 4 AD) and six females pain was evoked at all points, and in nine males (5 AMN, 1 cAMN, 2 AD and 1 cALD) and two females pain was evoked only at some points. The other two males (AD [#21, 22], Table 1) did not report pain at any point at the maximum level of pressure administered (5 kg). Pain intensity (VAS) ranged mainly from 1 to 3, being high (VAS 7–8) only in a few instances.
Cluster analysis of the PPT values and the corresponding VAS scores revealed two distinct groups of patients: the first cluster included five males (3 AMN, 2 AD) and six females, and the second cluster had 11 males (6 AMN, 1 cAMN, 4 AD). At all points, the PPT values (median, 3S Table) were lower in cluster 1 than in cluster 2, while the VAS scores were higher in cluster 1 than in cluster 2. A trend towards a negative correlation between PPT values and VAS scores was observed at 10 points in cluster 1, reaching significance at one point (Table 7). By contrast, a positive correlation between the PPT values and VAS scores was found at 8 points in cluster 2, the correlation being significant at five of these points (Table 7).
Table 7.
Points | Cluster 1 | Cluster 2 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
r | p | r | p | |
fa-vs-R | − 0.378 | Ns | + 0.639 | < 0.05 |
fa-vs-L | − 0.540 | Ns | + 0.762 | < 0.01 |
fa-ds-R | − 0.770 | < 0.05 | + 0.830 | < 0.01 |
fa-ds-L | − 0.623 | Ns | + 0.745 | < 0.01 |
f-ext-R | − 0.619 | Ns | + 0.647 | < 0.01 |
Correlations between PPT values and VAS scores within each cluster. Points: forearm, volar surface (fa-vs); forearm, dorsal surface (fa-ds); foot, external (f-ext)
L left, R right
Table 8 reports the distribution of the patients with abnormal sensations evoked by thermal and tactile stimuli within each cluster obtained with PPT/VAS values. The table also includes the number of patients with chronic pain. There were no differences between the clusters based on age, type of mutation or biochemical data.
Table 8.
Cluster | Algometer PPT Cluster 1 vs. cluster 2 |
Males/females | Thermal | Light touch | Pain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Lower threshold Higher VAS (HYPERALGESIC) |
Males Females |
2/5 no sensation 4/6 no sensation |
1/5 no sensation 0/6 no sensation |
2/5 5/6 |
2 |
Higher Threshold Lower VAS (HYPOALGESIC) |
Males Females |
8/11 no sensation | 4/11 no sensation | 3/11 |
Characteristics of the patients’ sensory profile in each cluster. No females were present in cluster 2
QST: Wind-Up Test
All patients underwent and completed the test. Sixteen patients, 13 male (8 AD, 4 AMN, 1 cAMN) and 3 female, exhibited the wind-up phenomenon, i.e. an increase in the VAS score after repetition of the suprathreshold stimulus at the established point, the increase ranging from 1 to 6.
Discussion
Chronic pain and sensory features were analyzed in a cohort of male and female subjects with an ABCD1-related phenotype. Almost half of these subjects reported chronic pain, with female subjects representing by far the higher percentage. Male patients differed greatly in the sensory phenotype according to the clinical variants of the disease, i.e. adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), cerebral AMN (cAMN), cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (cALD) and Addison's disease only (AD). We found significant sex differences in most of the applied tests.
X-ALD is characterized by the accumulation of VLCFA which appears to trigger the pathological events [1, 2, 10]. In the neural forms, the increased amount of VLCFA was shown to modify the structure and functions of the lipidic component of axons [17, 35]. The AMN axonopathy mainly involves large myelinated fibers (forming the major motor and mechanical sensory pathways), but small myelinated fibers (forming nociceptive and thermal sensory pathways) have recently been found to be involved [15, 17]. Thus, both large and small Aδ myelinated fibers may be damaged contemporaneously, with complex sensory outcomes. In the cerebral forms, severe demyelinization of the white matter, neuron shrinkage in the grey matter aggregates and fibrillary gliosis have been observed. These conditions result in dysfunction of brain tracts, nuclei and structures up to irreversible failure [36, 37]. In the AD clinical form, only adrenal cortex cells are affected, with loss of their functions [7, 8].
Studies have reported altered sensation and chronic pain in subjects affected by ALD; pain was localized mainly in the lower limbs [17, 38, 39] or was diffuse [8]. In the present study, pain was observed in a high percentage of patients (nearly 50%), with a significant prevalence of females; males with pain were mainly affected by AMN. No sex differences were found in pain intensity, quality or extension. In particular, some patients suffered from a pure form of neuropathic pain, while others showed a musculoskeletal component, in some instances due to the coexistent impairment of Aβ motor fibers, in others caused by conditioned behavioral responses. Of note, although avulsion of the brachial plexus usually causes unbearable pain [40], one AD patient mentioned low-intensity pain during the traumatic injury of the brachial plexus and the postoperative period. Another patient presented areas of altered perfusion, edema and trophic changes of skin and subcutaneous tissues in the legs, all signs presumably dependent on an abnormal sympathetic nervous system regulation of blood flow. In this case, primary impairment of the myelinic part of the sympathetic system [15, 17] and functional coupling between lesioned peripheral afferent nerve and sympathetic fibers [41], both generating or worsening pain, can be hypothesized. There are few literature reports focusing on the impairment of nociceptive pathways in this disease [15–17]. In AMN, the pain pathways may undergo degeneration in both the central and peripheral neural systems, and thus fibers may lose the ability to transmit signals or may fire spontaneously or inappropriately [42]. Kumar [16] described lesions of the spinothalamic tract localized in the thalamus in an AMN patient, while Horn [15] and Yague [17] highlighted small fiber dysfunctions.
A persistent injury or disease affecting the neural system can produce enhanced synaptic strength due to neuronal [43] and glial cell upregulation [44]; moreover, the latter component may be enhanced when there is a concurrent condition of neuroinflammation [45–48]. Interestingly, while in the cerebral clinical form (cAMN/cALD) of X-ALD a huge quantity of monocytes/macrophages and T-lymphocytes were found to cross the blood–brain barrier, inducing the microglia cells to undergo aberrant activation [49], in the AMN clinical variant, neuroinflammation appears to be absent or mild, although monocyte and macrophage infiltration and activation of microglia cells [50] have been found. Moreover, Marchetti et al. [51] showed increased blood levels of some inflammatory cytokines (IL-1, IL-8) in asymptomatic ALD subjects and of TNF-α in AMN patients, suggesting a neuro-inflammatory condition in AMN subjects as well. These immune cells secrete large amounts of proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines and also iNOS and other inflammatory mediators [52] which, increasing NMDA release at the synapse [44], amplify the nociceptive signaling, a condition that helps to explain the high percentage of patients suffering pain in this clinical form.
The functional status of small Aδ and large Aβ fibers was investigated by means of quantitative sensory testing (QST) [19, 21]. Standardized tests that activate specific fibers and switch on particular sensory submodalities were administered to investigate the ongoing behavior of the somatosensory system.
The functioning of Aδ fibers was examined by measuring the mechanical pain thresholds (von Frey and algometer tests). Interestingly, despite the presence of chronic pain in most of the patients, several males and females did not report pain at some/any points. This important condition of hypo/insensitivity can be attributed in AMN/cAMN/cALD patients to axon degeneration and thus a loss of function; in the AD patients, in which the integrity of the neural system has been largely confirmed [8, 9], an involvement of ß-endorphins can be hypothesized, as they have been found in peroxisomes of cells positive to the adrenoleukodystrophy protein (ALDP) [53, 54].
The response to the repeated stimulation by suprathreshold painful stimuli (wind-up) appears to confirm this interpretation. Indeed, all the AD subjects displayed this phenomenon, i.e. an increase in pain intensity in the stimulated area, while only a few AMN patients reported a heightened sensation. It is reasonable to infer that, in the AMN patients, degeneration or atrophy of the fibers was too severe to allow a gain of the signal, while in those who presented wind-up, the surviving nociceptors and axons were sufficient to contribute to a potentiated synaptic transmission [55]; alternatively, in these subjects the signal was likely maintained by vicarious mechanisms such as ectopic impulses which preserved the connection with the sensing brain [56]. It is worth noting that AD patients developed enhanced pain, although their nociceptive pathways were hyposensitive; thus, repeated stimulations as produced in the wind-up test allowed their activation and also their increased excitability.
The functional status of Aδ fibers was further assessed by means of the thermal test. A multifaceted spectrum of responses was observed, indicating that the degree of sensory loss varied greatly among subjects/clinical variants. Several males and females manifested no sensation or reported a minimal or ambiguous perception, particularly in the lower extremities, corroborating the dying-back pattern of the axonopathy. All males except two suffered from the neural clinical variant of the disorder; one of them and also a female exhibited allodynia in a remote area, showing the occurrence of central sensitization. These findings are in agreement with Yague et al. [17], showing thermoalgesic hypoesthesia in the lower body district of AMN subjects, and Horn et al. [15], who observed altered thermal sensitivity in the lower limbs of AMN males and females.
The performance of large Aβ fibers was examined by means of the mechanical threshold test. The thresholds were higher in the patients diagnosed with the neural variant than in AD patients, the difference being significant in the lower body district. Cluster analysis aggregated patients into four groups with distinct profiles with respect to the function examined. These outcomes substantiate a distal proximal pattern of the axonal degeneration in Aβ fibers as well. Moreover, a high percentage of AMN subjects and both patients diagnosed with the cerebral form did not perceive the light tactile stimulus or reported an unclear or weak sensation. As in the thermal test, one AMN subject experienced a burning pain in a distant area. All these aberrant responses were distributed in the lower limbs, confirming the length-dependent pattern of the axonopathy. Of note, no AD subject or female reported an altered sensation, even when the testing was carried out in areas presenting anomalies in other sensory submodalities. Thus, large Aβ fibers were impaired in several patients affected by the neural variant of the disorder, but their functioning was preserved in females and AD subjects.
Study Limitations
Some limitations of the study must be mentioned. The sample was too small to give unambiguous and conclusive findings, even though the patients were randomly enrolled over 2 years in the two major Italian study centers. Moreover, the QST findings must be regarded as closely linked to the contingencies; indeed, many potential confounding factors can influence sensory testing [57–60]. Lastly, this is a progressive disease, and thus the assessment describes the features only at the time of testing. Studies on a larger number of patients are needed to confirm our results.
Conclusions
To our knowledge, this is the first time that a systematic pain study has been carried out in patients suffering from this neuro-metabolic syndrome. We applied an objective method, the QST, to measure the sensory phenotype of our subjects who, unlike in similar studies of neuropathic patients, were tested at numerous points to obtain a body distribution of the alterations, confirming that the disease has a bottom-up pattern. Given that the sensory profile is a surrogate of the mechanisms underlying individual neuropathic pain [61], the outcomes of our study represent a premise for proposing targeted therapies, in agreement with international guidelines and, where possible, with an etiological approach.
Supplementary Information
Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
Acknowledgements
We thank the participants in the study, the University of Siena, Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital (Rome, Italy) and IRCCS C. Besta Neurological Institute Foundation (Milan, Italy) for the human resources provided for the present study and Dr. Peter Christie for the English revision of the text.
Funding
No funding or sponsorship was received for this study or for publication of this article.
Authorship
All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this article, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given their approval for this version to be published.
Disclosures
All Authors, Valeria Bachiocco, Marco Cappa, Anna Petroni, Ettore Salsano, Carla Bizzarri, Ilaria Ceccarelli, Gabriele Cevenini, Viviana Pensato and Anna Maria Aloisi, declare no conflict of interest.
Compliance with Ethics Guidelines
The study adhered to the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the local ethics committees of the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital and the Neurological Institute C. Besta; all the patients and their parents or guardians gave their written informed consent to use their clinical data in anonymized form (Mod.CUP_02consinf_15/07/2003 and subsequent amendments).
Data Availability
The datasets generated and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The datasets generated and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.