# Two-Year Outcomes of Sapropterin Treatment in Children with Phenylketonuria: A Longitudinal Observational Study of Metabolic, Dietary, and Psychosocial Effects

**Authors:** Ozlem Yilmaz Nas, Catherine Ashmore, Maria Ines Gama, Anne Daly, Sharon Evans, Alex Pinto, Yahya Ozdogan, Anita MacDonald

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu18030446 · Nutrients · 2026-01-29

## TL;DR

Sapropterin treatment helps children with PKU eat more natural protein, reduces caregiver stress, and supports healthy growth over two years.

## Contribution

This study provides new two-year evidence on the metabolic, dietary, and psychosocial benefits of sapropterin in PKU.

## Key findings

- Sapropterin-responsive children increased natural protein intake and reduced substitute protein use over two years.
- Caregivers of responsive children reported reduced financial and personal burdens and less food neophobia.
- Responsive children showed improved height z-scores and better metabolic control compared to non-responders.

## Abstract

Background: Evidence on the long-term impact of sapropterin in phenylketonuria (PKU) is limited. Understanding its effects on dietary restrictions, growth in children, and caregiver burden is essential to optimize PKU management. Methods: This prospective, two-year longitudinal study with a comparison group followed 33 children with PKU after sapropterin responsiveness assessment (21 responsive, 12 non-responsive). Outcomes included metabolic control, prescribed protein intake, dietary patterns, growth, psychological measures, and caregiver burden. Results: Sapropterin-responsive children increased natural protein intake from 10 g to 28 g/day at 2 years (p < 0.001), with reduced protein substitute intake (60 g [56–63] to 45 g [40–60], p < 0.05); no changes occurred in non-responsive children (p > 0.05). Animal-based foods (cheese, eggs, meat, fish) were introduced in 52% (11/21) of responsive children once tolerance exceeded approximately 25 g/day. The caregivers of responsive children reported reduced financial, familial-social, and personal burden (all p ≤ 0.05), alongside decreased food neophobia (p = 0.005) and caregiver depression (p = 0.013). In sapropterin-responsive children, weight and BMI z-scores remained stable, while height z-score increased over 24 months (p = 0.03); non-responsive children had higher weight and BMI z-scores than responsive children at 24 months (p = 0.037 and p = 0.026). Blood phenylalanine concentrations remained within recommended target ranges overall, with lower median values in responsive children at several time points. Conclusions: Sapropterin enabled more flexible, sustainable dietary management in responsive children with PKU, supporting metabolic control, growth, and improved family well-being and social participation. Equitable access to therapies and long-term dietetic support remain essential to optimize outcomes.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** sapropterin (PubChem CID 135398654), phenylalanine (PubChem CID 994)
- **Diseases:** phenylketonuria (MONDO:0009861), PKU (MONDO:0009861)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neophobia (MESH:D000080146), PKU (MESH:D010661), depression (MESH:D003866)
- **Chemicals:** Sapropterin (MESH:C003402), phenylalanine (MESH:D010649)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12899584/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12899584