Can the therapeutic efficacy of tocotrienols in neurodegenerative familial dysautonomia patients be measured clinically?

Rubin BY, Anderson SL, Kapás L.

Familial dysautonomia (FD) is an inherited, fatal, neurodegenerative disorder manifested by autonomic/hypertensive crises and cardiac instability. Patients produce little IKAP, the gene product of the affected mutated gene, and have low levels of monoamine oxidase A (MAO A), whose reduced presence appears to result in an increased accumulation of biogenic amines, which is a trigger for hypertensive crises. As ingestion of tocotrienols elevates IKAP and MAO A in FD patients, we examined their impact on the frequency of hypertensive crises and cardiac function. After 3 to 4 months of tocotrienol ingestion, approximately 80% of patients reported a significant (> or = 50%) decrease in the number of crises. In a smaller group of patients, a postexercise increase in heart rate and a decrease in the QT interval were observed in the majority of participants. Based on these findings, we hypothesize that tocotrienol therapy will improve the long-term clinical outlook and survival of individuals with FD.