Fatty acid oxidation disorder – Diagnostics

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Diagnosing fatty acid oxidation disorders early can be life-saving, yet the process requires careful testing and monitoring to distinguish these rare metabolic conditions from other illnesses and to ensure children receive the right care from the start.

Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When

Fatty acid oxidation disorders are rare inherited conditions that affect how the body breaks down fats for energy. Because these disorders can cause serious health problems, knowing when to seek diagnostic testing is crucial for families and healthcare providers. Early identification through testing can prevent life-threatening complications and allow for timely treatment that improves long-term outcomes.[1]

All newborns in the United States should undergo screening for the most common fatty acid oxidation disorders as part of routine newborn screening programs. This blood test is typically performed within the first few days of life, before symptoms appear. States require screening for conditions like medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD), which is one of the most common of these disorders.[1]

Beyond newborn screening, diagnostic testing becomes necessary when certain warning signs appear. Parents should seek medical evaluation if their infant or child shows symptoms such as extreme sleepiness that is unusual for the child’s age, irritability or sudden behavior changes, poor appetite, or episodes of vomiting and diarrhea, especially during illness or after missing meals.[5] These symptoms often emerge when the body tries to use fat for energy but cannot do so properly because of the enzyme deficiency.

Children who experience low blood sugar without the typical ketone production their body should make during fasting represent another group needing diagnostic evaluation. This condition, called hypoketotic hypoglycemia, occurs because the body cannot break down fats to produce ketones, which normally help maintain energy levels when glucose runs low.[2]

⚠️ Important
Symptoms of fatty acid oxidation disorders often appear when the body needs extra energy, such as during illness, after prolonged periods without eating, or during exercise. If your child develops confusion, extreme weakness, seizures, or becomes unresponsive during these times, seek emergency medical care immediately. These signs may indicate a metabolic crisis that requires urgent treatment.[1]

Older children and adolescents may need testing if they experience muscle pain and weakness after exercise, especially if accompanied by dark or reddish-brown urine. This pattern suggests rhabdomyolysis, which is the breakdown of muscle tissue that can occur in certain types of fatty acid oxidation disorders. Some individuals may not show symptoms until adolescence or adulthood, particularly those with milder forms of these conditions.[2]

Testing is also recommended for siblings of children already diagnosed with a fatty acid oxidation disorder, even if they appear healthy. Because these conditions are inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern, brothers and sisters have a higher chance of carrying the same genetic variants. Identifying affected siblings before symptoms develop allows for preventive dietary management.[1]

Diagnostic Methods: Classic Approaches to Identify the Disease

Diagnosing fatty acid oxidation disorders involves multiple layers of testing, starting with screening and progressing to more specific confirmatory tests. The diagnostic process aims to identify which specific enzyme deficiency is present and to rule out other conditions that might cause similar symptoms.

Newborn Screening

The first line of detection for many fatty acid oxidation disorders is newborn screening, which uses a method called tandem mass spectrometry. This sophisticated laboratory technique analyzes a small blood sample, usually collected by pricking the baby’s heel, to measure the levels of various substances called acylcarnitines in the blood.[1]

Different fatty acid oxidation disorders produce characteristic patterns of elevated acylcarnitines. For example, in MCADD, the screening detects elevated levels of octanoylcarnitine (also called C8 acylcarnitine) along with certain ratios of carnitine compounds. In very long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (VLCADD), the test identifies increased levels of long-chain acylcarnitines such as C14.[1][14]

The screening test is designed to catch problems early, which means it sometimes flags babies who may not actually have the disorder. When screening results are abnormal, additional confirmatory testing is always necessary to establish a definite diagnosis.[13]

Blood and Urine Tests

When a child shows symptoms or has an abnormal newborn screening result, doctors order more detailed laboratory tests. Blood tests during symptomatic episodes are particularly valuable because they reveal what happens in the body when it cannot properly break down fats. Healthcare providers look for low blood sugar levels combined with absent or very low ketones in the blood, a pattern that strongly suggests a fatty acid oxidation disorder.[2]

Blood ammonia levels may be elevated in some cases, especially in disorders affecting long-chain fatty acids. The liver enzymes measured in blood tests often show abnormal patterns, indicating liver stress or damage. Tests may also reveal an enlarged heart or heart muscle weakness, which can be detected through blood markers of heart muscle injury.[1]

Urine testing provides additional clues. Specialized urine tests called organic acid analysis can identify specific breakdown products that accumulate when fatty acid oxidation is blocked. The pattern of organic acids in urine differs depending on which enzyme is deficient. For instance, certain dicarboxylic acids appear in the urine of children with MCADD during metabolic crises.[13]

When muscle breakdown occurs, urine may contain myoglobin, a protein released from damaged muscle tissue. This condition, called myoglobinuria, turns the urine dark brown or reddish and can cause kidney damage if not treated promptly. Testing for myoglobin helps identify fatty acid oxidation disorders that primarily affect muscle tissue.[1]

Carnitine Measurements

Measuring carnitine levels in blood is an important part of diagnosis. Carnitine is a natural substance that helps transport fatty acids into cells for energy production. In some fatty acid oxidation disorders, total carnitine levels drop very low because carnitine gets used up trying to clear toxic accumulating substances from the body. In carnitine uptake deficiency, specialized proteins that bring carnitine into cells do not work properly, causing severely low carnitine levels in blood.[14]

Doctors also measure the ratio of free carnitine to acylcarnitines (carnitine molecules attached to fatty acid fragments). This ratio provides information about how well fatty acid oxidation is functioning and which specific disorder might be present.[9]

Genetic Testing

DNA testing confirms the diagnosis and identifies the specific genetic changes causing the disorder. Each type of fatty acid oxidation disorder results from mutations in a different gene. For example, MCADD is caused by mutations in the ACADM gene, while VLCADD results from mutations in the ACADVL gene.[4]

Genetic testing examines the entire gene sequence to find mutations. This testing not only confirms the diagnosis but also helps predict how severe the condition might be, as some mutations cause milder disease than others. Knowing the specific mutations also allows for genetic counseling and testing of family members who might be carriers.[13]

DNA testing can be performed on a blood sample at any time, not just during a metabolic crisis. This makes it particularly useful for confirming diagnoses in children whose symptoms are intermittent or who were flagged by newborn screening but are currently healthy.[1]

Specialized Enzyme Testing

In some cases, doctors measure the actual enzyme activity in cells to confirm the diagnosis. This requires obtaining a sample of cells, usually from skin (through a small biopsy), white blood cells, or sometimes liver tissue. The cells are then analyzed in specialized laboratories to measure how well the suspected deficient enzyme functions.[13]

Enzyme testing can be particularly helpful when genetic test results are unclear or when a patient’s symptoms and laboratory findings suggest a fatty acid oxidation disorder but routine tests have not identified which specific type is present.

Heart and Liver Imaging

Because fatty acid oxidation disorders can affect the heart and liver, imaging studies form part of the diagnostic workup. An echocardiogram, which uses ultrasound waves to create pictures of the heart, can show if the heart muscle has become thickened or weakened, a condition called cardiomyopathy. This complication appears in several types of fatty acid oxidation disorders, particularly those affecting long-chain fatty acid metabolism.[2]

An electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG) records the electrical activity of the heart and can detect irregular heartbeats that sometimes occur in these disorders. Liver ultrasound may reveal an enlarged liver or changes in liver structure, helping doctors assess the extent of organ involvement.[1]

Distinguishing From Other Conditions

An important part of diagnosis is ruling out other conditions that cause similar symptoms. Reye syndrome, for instance, can cause low blood sugar, liver problems, and brain dysfunction similar to a fatty acid oxidation disorder crisis. Careful testing helps doctors distinguish between these conditions. Similarly, other inherited metabolic disorders may present with low blood sugar and need to be differentiated through the specific pattern of laboratory abnormalities.[1]

The combination of clinical symptoms, timing of symptoms (such as occurring after fasting or illness), characteristic laboratory findings (hypoketotic hypoglycemia, specific acylcarnitine patterns), and genetic confirmation together provide a definitive diagnosis. No single test alone is sufficient; rather, the complete picture from multiple tests establishes which fatty acid oxidation disorder is present.[13]

Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification

When patients with fatty acid oxidation disorders are considered for participation in clinical research studies or trials, additional standardized testing criteria are used to determine eligibility. These diagnostic standards ensure that study participants truly have the condition being studied and that researchers can accurately measure whether a treatment being tested is effective.

Clinical trials typically require confirmed diagnosis through genetic testing showing disease-causing mutations in the relevant gene. This genetic confirmation is considered the gold standard for enrollment because it provides definitive proof of the disorder type. Trial protocols usually specify which types of mutations qualify for participation, as some studies may focus only on patients with certain severity levels of disease.[9]

Biochemical confirmation is also generally required, meaning patients must have documented abnormal laboratory test results consistent with their specific fatty acid oxidation disorder. This might include previous test results showing elevated specific acylcarnitines, abnormal organic acids in urine, low carnitine levels, or characteristic findings during a metabolic crisis. Researchers use these objective biochemical markers to establish that the disorder is active and affecting the patient’s metabolism.[2]

⚠️ Important
Clinical trials have strict inclusion and exclusion criteria to ensure participant safety and study validity. Just because a patient has been diagnosed with a fatty acid oxidation disorder does not automatically mean they qualify for every clinical trial. Each trial has specific requirements regarding age, disease severity, previous treatments, and other health conditions. Discuss with your metabolic specialist whether clinical trial participation might be appropriate for your situation.

Many trials require baseline assessment of how the disorder is affecting the patient’s daily life and physical function. This may involve exercise testing, where researchers measure how much physical activity the patient can tolerate before developing muscle pain or other symptoms. Muscle strength testing and questionnaires about daily activities help establish the patient’s functional status before any experimental treatment begins.[9]

For long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders specifically, trials often include detailed heart evaluations. This may involve echocardiograms to measure heart function and structure, ECG monitoring to detect irregular heartbeats, and sometimes more advanced cardiac imaging. Since heart problems are a serious complication of these disorders, establishing baseline heart health is critical for assessing whether a treatment improves or maintains cardiac function.[2]

Laboratory monitoring forms a major component of clinical trial diagnostics. Participants typically have blood and urine samples collected regularly throughout the study. Researchers track acylcarnitine levels, glucose control, liver function tests, and other metabolic markers to see whether the treatment being tested changes these values in beneficial ways. The frequency and types of laboratory tests are predetermined by the study protocol.[9]

Some trials may require specialized metabolic testing that is not part of routine clinical care. This could include detailed analysis of how the body uses different types of fats and sugars, measured through techniques like stable isotope studies. These research procedures help scientists understand exactly how a new treatment affects metabolism at a biochemical level.

Age and disease stage criteria vary by trial. Some studies focus only on children, others on adults, and some include all ages. Certain trials may only enroll patients who have experienced specific complications, such as episodes of rhabdomyolysis or documented heart muscle weakness, while others might seek participants who are relatively stable on current management.[2]

Documentation of current treatment and dietary management is necessary for trial enrollment. Researchers need to know what dietary restrictions the patient follows, what supplements they take, and how well they adhere to their current treatment plan. This information helps determine whether patients in different treatment groups were similar at the start of the study, which is important for interpreting results accurately.

Safety assessments required for trial participation include tests to ensure the patient does not have other medical conditions that might make the experimental treatment risky. This often includes kidney function tests, because several fatty acid oxidation disorder complications can affect the kidneys, as well as general health screening to identify any issues that might interfere with safe participation.

For trials testing new dietary treatments or supplements, participants may need to undergo metabolic testing to establish how their body currently responds to fasting or different types of food. This baseline information allows researchers to measure whether the new dietary approach improves metabolic stability compared to the patient’s previous response patterns.[2]

The diagnostic and monitoring requirements for clinical trial participation are more intensive than routine clinical care because research studies aim to collect detailed, precise data about treatment effects. While this may seem burdensome, the careful monitoring also means that any problems or complications are detected quickly, and patients in clinical trials often receive more frequent medical attention than they might otherwise.

Prognosis and Survival Rate

Prognosis

The prognosis for individuals with fatty acid oxidation disorders varies considerably depending on several factors, including which specific disorder is present, how early it is diagnosed, and how well the condition is managed with diet and medical care. Early diagnosis through newborn screening and prompt initiation of treatment have significantly improved outcomes for many patients with these conditions.[2]

For medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD), which is the most common fatty acid oxidation disorder, the long-term outcome is generally good when the condition is identified early and patients follow their dietary management plan carefully. Children diagnosed through newborn screening and managed properly can typically avoid the serious complications that affected patients in the past, when diagnosis often did not occur until after a life-threatening crisis.[1]

Long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders, such as VLCADD, LCHADD, and TFP deficiency, tend to have more complex prognoses. These conditions carry a higher risk of developing chronic complications even with good management. Patients may experience progressive complications including ongoing heart muscle problems, damage to peripheral nerves, and vision problems from retinal damage. These long-term effects can substantially impact quality of life and require ongoing medical monitoring and care.[1][2]

The timing and severity of initial presentation influences long-term outcome. Patients who present in the newborn period with severe symptoms such as heart failure or profound metabolic crisis generally face more challenging prognoses than those whose symptoms appear later in childhood or who are identified before becoming symptomatic. However, even among individuals with the same genetic mutations, disease severity can vary, suggesting that other factors beyond genetics also influence how the disorder progresses.[9]

Adherence to dietary management plays a crucial role in prognosis. Patients who consistently avoid fasting, eat frequent meals, follow their prescribed low-fat or modified-fat diets, and take recommended supplements tend to have fewer metabolic crises and better long-term outcomes. Conversely, poor adherence to dietary recommendations increases the risk of acute decompensations and chronic complications.[2]

Despite optimal management, some patients with long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders continue to experience symptoms that limit their physical activity and affect their daily functioning. Exercise intolerance, muscle pain, and chronic fatigue can persist even when patients carefully follow all treatment recommendations. These ongoing symptoms can impact career choices, social activities, and overall quality of life, creating challenges for patients and families.[18]

The risk of sudden death, while reduced by early diagnosis and good management, remains a concern particularly during metabolic stress from illness, prolonged fasting, or unusual exertion. Families must remain vigilant about preventing situations that could trigger a crisis and must respond quickly with emergency protocols when illness occurs.[1]

Survival rate

Historical data from before newborn screening was implemented showed that fatty acid oxidation disorders, particularly MCADD, carried a significant risk of sudden unexpected death in infancy and childhood. Many children died during their first metabolic crisis before the underlying disorder was recognized. The introduction of newborn screening has dramatically changed this picture, substantially reducing mortality rates for the most commonly screened disorders.[2]

For MCADD detected through newborn screening and managed with appropriate dietary care, survival rates approach those of the general population when families adhere to management protocols. The key is preventing the first metabolic crisis through early diagnosis and careful avoidance of fasting. The long-term outcome for these patients, when well managed, is generally excellent.[1]

Long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders present more concerning survival statistics. These conditions are associated with significant morbidity and mortality even with current management approaches. Episodes of metabolic decompensation can be life-threatening, and the chronic complications, particularly progressive heart disease, contribute to reduced life expectancy in some patients.[2]

The development of cardiomyopathy represents a major factor affecting survival in long-chain disorders. Heart muscle weakness can progress despite dietary management, and severe cardiomyopathy may ultimately require heart transplantation in the most seriously affected individuals. Monitoring heart function regularly is essential for identifying those at highest risk.[20]

Specific survival statistics vary by disorder type and study population, but research indicates that early diagnosis through newborn screening and early initiation of treatment improve outcomes substantially compared to symptomatic diagnosis. The widespread implementation of newborn screening programs continues to evolve understanding of the natural history of these disorders and is gradually improving survival rates.[2]

It is important to recognize that survival statistics reflect populations studied in the past, often before current treatments were available or optimized. Ongoing research into new therapies, including novel dietary approaches and medications, offers hope for further improving outcomes. Recent therapeutic advances, such as the approval of new treatment options for long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders, may improve both survival and quality of life, though long-term data on these newer treatments are still being collected.[9]

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Fatty acid oxidation disorder

  • Study on the Effects of Triheptanoin and Medium-chain Triglycerides in Children with Long-chain Fatty Acid Oxidation Disorders

    Not recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Czechia Germany Poland Spain

References

https://www.merckmanuals.com/home/children-s-health-issues/hereditary-metabolic-disorders/fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6331364/

https://www.msdmanuals.com/home/children-s-health-issues/hereditary-metabolic-disorders/fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders

https://www.chop.edu/conditions-diseases/long-chain-fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders-lc-faods

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatty-acid_metabolism_disorder

https://newbornscreening.utah.gov/disorder-types/fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders/

https://www.chp.edu/our-services/rare-disease-therapy/conditions-we-treat/fatty-acid-oxidation-deficiencies

https://www.mitoaction.org/fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8676101/

https://www.chop.edu/conditions-diseases/long-chain-fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders-lc-faods

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6331364/

https://www.ajmc.com/view/long-chain-fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders-and-current-management-strategies

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41431-022-01260-1

https://dhhr.wv.gov/ols/labs/Pages/fattyacidoxidationdisorders.aspx

https://www.merckmanuals.com/home/children-s-health-issues/hereditary-metabolic-disorders/fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders

https://www.mitoaction.org/fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders/day-to-day-with-faod/

https://www.faodinfocus.com/living-with-lc-faod/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10764200/

https://www.faodinfocus.com/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7560910/

https://www.chop.edu/conditions-diseases/long-chain-fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders-lc-faods

https://www.ajmc.com/view/long-chain-fatty-acid-oxidation-disorders-and-current-management-strategies

https://medlineplus.gov/diagnostictests.html

https://www.questdiagnostics.com/

https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/diagnostic-tests

https://www.who.int/health-topics/diagnostics

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6558629/

https://www.yalemedicine.org/clinical-keywords/diagnostic-testsprocedures

https://www.health.harvard.edu/diagnostic-tests-and-medical-procedures

FAQ

What is the difference between newborn screening and diagnostic testing for fatty acid oxidation disorders?

Newborn screening is a preliminary test done on all babies to identify those who might have a fatty acid oxidation disorder. It measures specific substances in blood that are elevated when these disorders are present. However, screening sometimes flags babies who turn out to be healthy. Diagnostic testing includes follow-up blood tests, urine tests, genetic testing, and other evaluations that definitively confirm whether the disorder is truly present and identify exactly which type it is.

Can fatty acid oxidation disorders be detected during pregnancy?

Yes, in some cases. If parents already have a child with a fatty acid oxidation disorder or if both parents are known carriers, prenatal testing can be performed through amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling. These procedures obtain fetal cells that can be tested for the specific genetic mutations causing the disorder. Additionally, certain pregnancy complications in the mother, particularly with LCHADD, can raise suspicion that the fetus might be affected.

How accurate is newborn screening for fatty acid oxidation disorders?

Newborn screening using tandem mass spectrometry is generally quite accurate for detecting fatty acid oxidation disorders, particularly MCADD. However, no screening test is perfect. Some babies with very mild forms of these disorders might not be detected (false negatives), while some healthy babies may have borderline or elevated results that later prove to be false alarms (false positives). This is why abnormal screening results always require additional confirmatory testing before a final diagnosis is made.

Why is genetic testing important if blood tests already show abnormal results?

Genetic testing serves several important purposes beyond initial diagnosis. It confirms exactly which disorder is present when biochemical results are unclear, helps predict disease severity based on the specific mutations found, allows testing of siblings and other family members who might be affected or be carriers, and provides definitive documentation needed for clinical trial enrollment. Additionally, knowing the specific genetic mutations helps with family planning and genetic counseling for future pregnancies.

What should I do if my child’s newborn screening comes back abnormal for a fatty acid oxidation disorder?

First, try not to panic—many abnormal newborn screening results turn out to be false alarms. Contact your pediatrician immediately and follow their instructions, which typically include arranging urgent follow-up testing with a metabolic specialist. Until the diagnosis is confirmed or ruled out, you may be advised to avoid letting your baby go for long periods without feeding. Bring your baby in for evaluation quickly, as early treatment can prevent serious complications if a disorder is truly present. Keep all appointments and bring the newborn screening results with you.

🎯 Key takeaways

  • All newborns in the United States are screened for fatty acid oxidation disorders through a simple blood test that can detect these conditions before symptoms appear, dramatically improving survival rates.
  • The hallmark laboratory finding in these disorders is low blood sugar combined with absent or very low ketones—a pattern that should immediately raise suspicion of a fatty acid oxidation problem.
  • Symptoms often emerge during times of metabolic stress like illness, fasting, or exercise, when the body tries to burn fat for energy but cannot do so properly.
  • Tandem mass spectrometry, the technology behind newborn screening, can detect dozens of metabolic disorders from just a few drops of blood by measuring characteristic patterns of accumulated substances.
  • Genetic testing not only confirms the diagnosis but also reveals the specific mutations present, which helps predict disease severity and assists with family planning and testing siblings.
  • Dark or reddish-brown urine after exercise in a child or adolescent can signal muscle breakdown from a fatty acid oxidation disorder and requires immediate medical evaluation.
  • Long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders require more extensive diagnostic workups including heart monitoring, as these conditions frequently affect cardiac muscle and can cause serious heart complications.
  • Clinical trial participation requires rigorous diagnostic confirmation including genetic testing and detailed baseline assessments, but provides access to novel treatments and exceptionally thorough medical monitoring.