Nitrogen Scavengers: History, Clinical Considerations and Future Prospects
Sven Klassa, Johannes Häberle

TL;DR
This review discusses nitrogen scavengers used to treat ammonia buildup in urea cycle disorders and highlights the need for better therapies.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive review of nitrogen scavengers, their clinical use, and future directions for improved ammonia removal therapies.
Findings
Nitrogen scavengers like sodium benzoate and phenylacetate help manage ammonia by forming excretable compounds.
Phenylbutyrate improves tolerability but still has taste and side effect issues.
Current treatments target waste products, not ammonia directly, suggesting a path for future drug development.
Abstract
Nitrogen scavengers play a critical role in treating acute and chronic hyperammonemia, especially in urea cycle disorders (UCDs), where impaired ammonia detoxification leads to toxic nitrogen accumulation. These agents complement low‐protein diets and urea cycle intermediates. Sodium benzoate and sodium phenylacetate are the main scavengers, conjugating with glycine and glutamine to form hippurate and phenylacetylglutamine, which are excreted in urine. This therapeutic approach, introduced in the 1980s, was based on early findings linking benzoate to reduced urea excretion. Nitrogen scavengers are also used in secondary hyperammonemia from organic acidemias and fatty acid oxidation disorders, though they may become increasingly ineffective in progressing liver failure due to their reliance on hepatocyte function. To improve tolerability, phenylbutyrate was developed as an oral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetabolism and Genetic Disorders · Liver Disease and Transplantation · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology
