An approach to recognising and identifying metabolic presentations in the paediatric Irish Traveller population.

Unlabelled

The Irish Traveller population are an endogamous, traditionally nomadic, Irish population. Irish Travellers practice consanguinity in the majority of marriages, thus resulting in a higher rate of rare autosomal recessive conditions within the population due to homozygous variants. Herein, we outline the clinical phenotypes associated with metabolic conditions seen in this population presenting in the neonatal period, infancy and childhood. Although Irish Travellers are traditionally based in Ireland and the UK, there are populations also living in mainland Europe and the USA. While there is generally an understanding amongst Irish paediatricians of the recessive conditions seen with this population in Ireland, they may be less commonly encountered abroad. It is important to consider a non-genetic aetiology alongside any consideration for a metabolic disorder.

Conclusion

This paper acts as a comprehensive review of the metabolic conditions seen and provides a guide for the investigation of an Irish Traveller child with a suspected metabolic condition.

What is known

• The Irish Traveller population are an endogenous population. • There are higher rates of inherited metabolic conditions in this population compared to the general population in Ireland.

What is new

• This paper is a comprehensive review of all known inherited metabolic conditions encountered in the Irish Traveller population.

© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Overview publication

TitleAn approach to recognising and identifying metabolic presentations in the paediatric Irish Traveller population.
Date2023-01-01
Issue nameEuropean journal of pediatrics
Issue numberv182.1:31-40
DOI10.1007/s00431-022-04697-0
PubMed36374302
AuthorsForman EB, Lynch SA, Knerr I, Monavari A, Hughes J, Boruah R, Green A & Crushell E
KeywordsConsanguinity, Inborn errors of metabolism, Inherited metabolic disorders, Irish Travellers, Recessive disease
Read Read publication