Classical galactosaemia is relatively common in Ireland due to a high carrier rate of the Q188R
GALT mutation. It is screened for using a bacterial inhibition assay (BIA) for free galactose. A Beutler assay on day one of life
is performed only in high risk cases (infants of the Traveller community and relatives of known cases). A 16-month-old Irish-born
boy of Nigerian origin was referred for investigation of developmental delay, and failure to thrive. He had oral aversion
to solids and his diet consisted of cow’s milk and milk-based cereal mixes. He was found to have microcephaly, weight <2nd
percentile, hepatomegaly and bilateral cataracts. Coagulation screen was normal and transaminases were slightly elevated.
His original newborn screen was reviewed and confirmed to have been negative; urinary reducing substances on three separate
occasions were negative. Beutler assay demonstrated “absent” red cell galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase (GALT) activity.
GALT enzyme activity was <0.5 gsubs/h per gHb confirming classical galactosaemia. Gal-1-P was elevated at 1.88 μmol/gHb. Mutation
analysis of the
GALT gene revealed S135L homozygosity. S135L/S135L galactosaemia is associated with absent red cell GALT activity but with approximately
10% activity in other tissues such as the liver and intestines, probably explaining the negative screening tests and the somewhat
milder phenotype associated with this genotype. The patient was commenced on galactose-restricted diet; on follow-up at 2
years of age, growth had normalized but there was global developmental delay. In conclusion, galactosaemia must be considered
in children who present with poor growth, hepatomegaly, developmental delay and cataracts and GALT enzyme analysis should
be a first line test in such cases. Non-enzymatic screening methods such as urinary reducing substances and BIA for free galactose
are not reliable in S135L homozygous galactosaemia.
Communicating editor: Bridget Wilcken
Competing interests: None declared
References to electronic databases: Classical galactosaemia: OMIM 230400.