The Diagnosis of Acute Intermittent Porphyria: Usefulness and Limitations of the Erythrocyte Uroporphyrinogen I Synthase Assay

Abstract
In acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) the inherited metabolic defect resides in a partial enzyme deficiency at the uroporphyrinogen I synthase (URO-S) step of heme biosynthesis. Assay of this enzyme in erythrocytes is increasingly used for diagnosis of the genetic defect. Erythrocyte URO-S activity was measured by three laboratories in members of 14 AIP kindreds and found helpful for diagnosing the asymptomatic carrier state, since activity of the enzyme was usually distributed bimodally. However, a definite diagnosis of the carrier state was not always possible with this assay: approximately 7% of a total of 340 determinations were inconclusive. Repeat enzyme assays, enzyme assays by more than one laboratory, quantitative urine porphobilinogen determinations, and studies of other family members all aided in arriving at a firm diagnosis for most of those in whom a single erythrocyte URO-S measurement was inconclusive. Because the enzyme is unstable, blood specimens should be stored frozen if immediate assay is not possible.