Crigler-Najjar syndrome

Background

  • Crigler-Najjar syndrome (CNS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder of bilirubin metabolism caused by absent (type 1) or severely reduced (type 2) UGT1A1 enzyme activity, resulting in severe unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia from birth.[1] Type 1 is a life-threatening neonatal emergency — without aggressive phototherapy and ultimately liver transplantation, the accumulation of unconjugated bilirubin causes kernicterus (irreversible bilirubin-induced brain damage).[2] Type 2 (Arias syndrome) is milder and manageable with phenobarbital.
  • The emergency physician may encounter CNS as persistent severe neonatal jaundice unresponsive to standard phototherapy, or as an acute bilirubin crisis in a known CNS patient triggered by illness, fasting, or surgery.
  • Extremely rare: estimated ~100 known type 1 cases worldwide at any given time; type 2 is somewhat more common[1]
  • Higher prevalence in the Amish and Mennonite communities (founder effect)
  • Exists on a spectrum with Gilbert syndrome — all three conditions involve UGT1A1 mutations but differ in severity:
Feature CN type 1 CN type 2 (Arias) Gilbert syndrome
UGT1A1 activity Absent Markedly reduced (<10% of normal) Reduced (~30% of normal)
Bilirubin level 20-50 mg/dL (can exceed 50) 6-20 mg/dL Typically <3 mg/dL (rarely to 6)
Kernicterus risk Very high — constant threat Rare but possible (illness, anesthesia) None
Response to phenobarbital None (critical diagnostic distinction) Yes (reduces bilirubin ~25%) Yes (but not needed)
Treatment Phototherapy 10-16 hours/day + liver transplant Phenobarbital ± phototherapy None required
Prognosis Fatal without transplant; brain damage risk Survival into adulthood; near-normal life Normal lifespan; benign

Mechanism

  • UGT1A1 enzyme conjugates bilirubin with glucuronic acid → water-soluble conjugated bilirubin → excreted in bile
  • In CN type 1: complete absence of UGT1A1 activity → no conjugation → unconjugated bilirubin accumulates to dangerous levels
  • In CN type 2: severe reduction (<10%) of UGT1A1 activity → some conjugation occurs → lower bilirubin levels
  • Unconjugated bilirubin is lipophilic and crosses the blood-brain barrier → deposits in basal ganglia, brainstem nuclei, cerebellum → kernicterus[1]

Clinical features

CN type 1 — the neonatal emergency

  • Severe jaundice within the first days of life — total bilirubin typically 20-50 mg/dL; entirely unconjugated
  • All other liver function tests completely normal (AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, albumin, coagulation studies)
  • No evidence of hemolysis (normal reticulocyte count, haptoglobin, LDH, smear)
  • Jaundice is persistent and progressive despite standard neonatal phototherapy
  • Does NOT respond to phenobarbital — this distinguishes CN1 from CN2 and is a critical diagnostic feature[2]
  • Without treatment, kernicterus develops — often within the first weeks to months of life

Acute bilirubin encephalopathy (early kernicterus) — ED emergency signs

  • Lethargy, poor feeding, hypotonia (early)
  • High-pitched cry
  • Fever
  • Irritability progressing to opisthotonus (arching of the back/neck — hypertonia)
  • Seizures
  • Apnea/respiratory failure
  • Coma
  • This is a medical emergency — bilirubin-induced brain damage may become irreversible within hours

Chronic bilirubin encephalopathy (established kernicterus)

  • Choreoathetoid cerebral palsy (extrapyramidal movement disorder)
  • Upward gaze palsy
  • Sensorineural hearing loss (auditory neuropathy)
  • Dental enamel hypoplasia
  • Cognitive function often relatively preserved

CN type 2 (Arias syndrome) — milder presentation

  • Intermittent mild-to-moderate jaundice (bilirubin 6-20 mg/dL)
  • Typically diagnosed later in childhood or adolescence
  • Jaundice worsens with illness, fasting, stress, surgery, anesthesia
  • Responds to phenobarbital (bilirubin decreases ~25% within 2-3 weeks)
  • Kernicterus is rare but has been reported, especially during intercurrent illness or general anesthesia[1]
  • Most patients survive into adulthood without neurologic damage

Known CNS patient presenting to the ED

  • Bilirubin crisis precipitated by:
    • Intercurrent illness (infection, febrile illness)
    • Fasting/dehydration
    • Surgery/general anesthesia (bilirubin may rise dramatically perioperatively)
    • Noncompliance with phototherapy (CN1)
    • Discontinuation of phenobarbital (CN2)
  • May present with worsening jaundice, signs of early encephalopathy, or family concern about rising bilirubin levels

Differential diagnosis

Severe neonatal unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia

  • Crigler-Najjar syndrome type 1 (bilirubin >20 mg/dL; no hemolysis; phenobarbital unresponsive)
  • Crigler-Najjar syndrome type 2 (bilirubin 6-20 mg/dL; phenobarbital responsive)
  • Hemolytic disease of the newborn (Rh/ABO incompatibility, G6PD deficiency, hereditary spherocytosis) — positive Coombs test, elevated reticulocytes, abnormal smear
  • Physiologic/breastfeeding jaundice — resolves; bilirubin typically <15 mg/dL
  • Gilbert syndrome — bilirubin typically <6 mg/dL; does not cause kernicterus alone
  • Sepsis — other systemic signs present
  • Hypothyroidism — prolonged jaundice; check TSH

Key distinguishing feature of CN type 1

  • Bilirubin >20 mg/dL that is entirely unconjugated + normal liver function + no hemolysis + no response to phenobarbital = CN type 1 until proven otherwise

Evaluation

ED workup

  • Fractionated bilirubin (total and direct): confirms purely unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia
  • Hepatic panel: AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, GGT, albumin — must be entirely normal (liver is structurally and functionally intact in CNS)
  • Coagulation studies: PT/INR — normal (unless neonate has other vitamin K-related issues)
  • CBC with reticulocyte count and peripheral smear: to exclude hemolysis
  • Haptoglobin, LDH: normal (no hemolysis)
  • Direct Coombs test: negative (excludes immune-mediated hemolysis)
  • Blood type (mother and infant): to evaluate for ABO/Rh incompatibility
  • TSH: to exclude hypothyroidism
  • Blood glucose: neonates with severe jaundice may have concurrent hypoglycemia

Confirmatory testing (arrange via specialist)

  • Phenobarbital trial: the most practical bedside distinguishing test between CN1 and CN2; phenobarbital (3-5 mg/kg/day for 2-3 weeks) will reduce bilirubin in CN2 but not in CN1[2]
  • UGT1A1 gene sequencing: confirms diagnosis and distinguishes type 1 from type 2
  • Bile analysis: near-complete absence of bilirubin conjugates in bile confirms CN1 (available via duodenal aspiration; not an ED test)

Management

Acute bilirubin crisis (CN1 patient or any patient with bilirubin approaching kernicterus threshold)

  • Intensive phototherapy: initiate immediately[2]
    • Blue LED light (wavelength 460-490 nm)
    • Maximize body surface area exposure (undress the infant; use overhead and underneath light sources)
    • Phototherapy converts unconjugated bilirubin into water-soluble photoisomers that can be excreted without conjugation
  • Exchange transfusion: if bilirubin is at or above the exchange transfusion threshold for age, or if signs of acute bilirubin encephalopathy are present
    • Rapidly removes circulating unconjugated bilirubin
    • Double-volume exchange (twice the infant's blood volume)
  • Plasmapheresis: alternative to exchange transfusion in older children/adults; effectively removes unconjugated bilirubin[3]
  • IV albumin: binds free unconjugated bilirubin in the blood and may reduce the fraction crossing the blood-brain barrier; give 1 g/kg IV before exchange transfusion
  • Aggressive IV fluid hydration with dextrose-containing fluids
  • Treat precipitating illness: antibiotics if infection; correct dehydration; resume nutrition
  • Avoid drugs that displace bilirubin from albumin: sulfonamides, ceftriaxone, salicylates — these increase free (unbound) unconjugated bilirubin and worsen kernicterus risk

Ongoing management of CN type 1

  • Daily phototherapy: 10-16 hours per day, lifelong (until liver transplant)[2]
    • Phototherapy becomes less effective with age as skin thickens and body surface area-to-volume ratio decreases — this creates increasing risk of kernicterus around puberty
  • Liver transplantation: the only definitive cure for CN type 1[1]
    • Transplanted liver has normal UGT1A1 activity → bilirubin normalizes
    • Post-transplant survival: 86-100% at 1 year, 79-92% at 10 years
    • Prophylactic transplant is recommended before kernicterus develops, as kernicterus may not be reversible
    • Timing is difficult because onset of neurologic damage is unpredictable
  • Hepatocyte transplantation: experimental; temporary reduction (~50%) in bilirubin; may bridge to transplant
  • Gene therapy: AAV-mediated UGT1A1 gene delivery is in clinical trials; promising but not yet standard of care
  • Adjunctive medications: calcium phosphate (bilirubin binder in gut), orlistat (reduces enterohepatic circulation), vitamin E, CoQ10, L-carnitine

Management of CN type 2

  • Phenobarbital: 3-5 mg/kg/day; reduces bilirubin by ~25% through UGT1A1 enzyme induction; this is the mainstay of therapy[1]
  • Phototherapy during acute exacerbations
  • Liver transplantation rarely needed
  • Avoid triggers: fasting, dehydration, intercurrent illness
  • Perioperative planning: inform anesthesia and surgery teams; bilirubin may rise dramatically with general anesthesia; optimize phenobarbital, ensure phototherapy availability, consider perioperative albumin infusion

Disposition

  • Neonate with suspected CN type 1 (severe unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia unresponsive to standard phototherapy):
    • NICU admission
    • Continuous intensive phototherapy
    • Exchange transfusion if at threshold or encephalopathy present
    • Genetics/metabolic and hepatology consultation
    • Early referral to liver transplant center
  • Known CN1 patient with bilirubin crisis:
    • Admit (ICU if encephalopathy signs present)
    • Intensive phototherapy; exchange transfusion/plasmapheresis if bilirubin critically elevated
    • Identify and treat trigger
    • Contact the patient's hepatologist/metabolic specialist
  • Known CN2 patient with jaundice exacerbation:
    • Ensure phenobarbital is being taken and at therapeutic levels
    • Treat precipitating illness
    • Phototherapy if bilirubin significantly elevated
    • May be managed as outpatient if bilirubin is well below encephalopathy threshold and patient is clinically well; close follow-up
  • General precautions for all CNS patients:
    • Carry a medical alert identification
    • Inform all healthcare providers of the diagnosis
    • Avoid medications that displace bilirubin from albumin (sulfonamides, ceftriaxone, salicylates)
    • Avoid prolonged fasting
    • Surgical/anesthetic procedures require advance planning with the metabolic team

See Also

External Links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Crigler-Najjar Syndrome. StatPearls. NCBI. 2024.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Management of Crigler-Najjar syndrome. Expert Opin Orphan Drugs. 2021. PMC8411811.
  3. Fox IJ, et al. Treatment of the Crigler-Najjar Syndrome Type I with Hepatocyte Transplantation. N Engl J Med. 1998;338(20):1422-1426.