It is caused by abnormalities in the gene coding for uridine diphosphoglucuronate glucuronosyltransferase. UGT1A1 normally catalyzes the conjugation of bilirubin and glucuronic acid within hepatocytes. Conjugated bilirubin is more water soluble and is excreted in bile.
Diagnosis
Type I
This is a very rare disease, and consanguinity increases the risk of this condition. Inheritance is autosomalrecessive. Intense jaundice appears in the first days of life and persists thereafter. Type 1 is characterised by a serum bilirubin usually above 345 µmol/L . No UDP glucuronosyltransferase 1-A1 expression can be detected in the liver tissue. Hence, there is no response to treatment with phenobarbital, which causes CYP450 enzyme induction. Most patients have a mutation in one of the common exons, and have difficulties conjugating several additional substrates. A smaller percentage of patients have mutations limited to the bilirubin-specific A1 exon; their conjugation defect is mostly restricted to bilirubin itself. Before the availability of phototherapy, these children died of kernicterus or survived until early adulthood with clear neurological impairment. Today, therapy includes
oral calcium phosphate and carbonate to form complexes with bilirubin in the gut
liver transplantation before the onset of brain damage and before phototherapy becomes ineffective at later age
Type II
The inheritance patterns of both Crigler–Najjar syndrome types I and II are autosomal recessive. However, type II differs from type I in a number of different aspects:
Bilirubin levels are generally below 345 µmol/L , and some cases are only detected later in life.
Because of lower serum bilirubin, kernicterus is rare in type II.
Bile is pigmented, instead of pale in type I or dark as normal, and monoconjugates constitute the largest fraction of bile conjugates.
UGT1A1 is present at reduced but detectable levels, because of single base pair mutations.
Therefore, treatment with phenobarbital is effective, generally with a decrease of at least 25% in serum bilirubin. In fact, this can be used, along with these other factors, to differentiate type I and II.
In Crigler–Najjar syndrome and Gilbert syndrome, routine liver function tests are normal, and hepatichistology usually is normal, too. No evidence for hemolysis is seen. Drug-induced cases typically regress after discontinuation of the substance. Physiological neonatal jaundice may peak at 85–170 µmol/l and decline to normal adult concentrations within two weeks. Prematurity results in higher levels.
Treatment
Plasmapheresis and phototherapy are used for treatment. Liver transplant is curative.
Research
A San Francisco based company named Audentes Therapeutics is currently investigating the treatment of Crigler-Najjar syndrome with one of their gene replacement therapy products, AT342. Preliminary success has been found in early stages of a phase 1/2 clinical trial. One 10-year-old girl with Crigler–Najjar syndrome type I was successfully treated by liver cell transplantation. The homozygous Gunn rat, which lacks the enzymeuridine diphosphate glucuronyltransferase, is an animal model for the study of Crigler–Najjar syndrome. Since only one enzyme is working improperly, gene therapy for Crigler-Najjar is a theoretical option which is being investigated.