Hereditary fructose intolerance
Background
- Hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by deficiency of aldolase B, an enzyme essential for fructose metabolism in the liver, kidney, and intestine.[1] When individuals with HFI ingest fructose, sucrose, or sorbitol, the toxic metabolite fructose-1-phosphate (F-1-P) accumulates, causing hypoglycemia, lactic acidosis, hepatic failure, and renal tubular dysfunction.[2] HFI is entirely asymptomatic when fructose is avoided and potentially fatal when it is not.
- The emergency physician encounters HFI as an infant with vomiting, hypoglycemia, and liver failure temporally related to the introduction of weaning foods, or as a known HFI patient with accidental fructose exposure.
- Autosomal recessive; prevalence approximately 1 in 20,000-30,000 live births; carrier frequency ~1 in 70[3]
- Caused by mutations in the ALDOB gene (chromosome 9q22.3); most common mutations are A149P, A150P, and A174D
- Symptoms only occur after ingestion of fructose, sucrose, or sorbitol — patients are completely well on a fructose-free diet
- Typically presents at 4-6 months of age when weaning foods (fruits, vegetables, sweetened cereals, juices) are introduced[1]
- Breastfed infants are protected — breast milk contains lactose (glucose + galactose) but no fructose; symptoms begin when breast milk is supplemented or weaning starts
- Deaths occur primarily from diagnostic delay — once recognized, the treatment (dietary fructose avoidance) is simple and completely effective[4]
Mechanism
- Fructose is phosphorylated by fructokinase → fructose-1-phosphate (F-1-P)
- Aldolase B normally cleaves F-1-P → glyceraldehyde + dihydroxyacetone phosphate (enter glycolysis/gluconeogenesis)
- In HFI: aldolase B is absent or deficient → F-1-P accumulates → multiple downstream effects:
- Intracellular phosphate trapping: F-1-P sequesters inorganic phosphate (Pi) → depletion of ATP
- Hypoglycemia: F-1-P inhibits both glycogenolysis (glycogen phosphorylase) AND gluconeogenesis (glucose-6-phosphate isomerase) — a dual block on glucose production[2]
- Glucagon resistance: hypoglycemia in HFI does NOT respond to glucagon (because glycogenolysis is blocked)[2]
- Lactic acidosis: F-1-P activates pyruvate kinase → increased lactate production
- Hyperuricemia: ATP depletion → AMP degradation → increased urate production
- Hepatocellular and renal tubular toxicity: direct cytotoxic effects of F-1-P accumulation → liver failure, Fanconi syndrome
Key dietary sources of fructose (EM-relevant)
- Fruits (all), fruit juices, honey
- Sucrose (table sugar) — sucrose = glucose + fructose; present in nearly all sweetened foods, candy, cookies, soft drinks
- Sorbitol — sugar alcohol used as sweetener in "sugar-free" products; also found in many medications (syrups, elixirs, chewable tablets) — a critical hidden source
- High-fructose corn syrup — ubiquitous in processed foods
- Many vegetables contain small amounts of fructose (especially peas, sweet corn, sweet potato)
- IV fructose or sorbitol solutions (historically used in some parenteral nutrition formulations — now rarely used but must be actively avoided)
Clinical features
Acute presentation (the ED encounter)
Infant with new diagnosis (classic presentation)
- Previously healthy breastfed infant, 4-6 months old
- Symptoms begin within minutes to hours of ingesting fructose-containing food or formula for the first time
- Vomiting (often violent/repeated)
- Profound hypoglycemia (lethargy, seizures, diaphoresis, pallor)
- Abdominal pain/distress
- Poor feeding, irritability
- With continued fructose exposure:
- Hepatomegaly (progressive)
- Jaundice (conjugated hyperbilirubinemia)
- Coagulopathy (elevated INR — hepatic synthetic failure)
- Bleeding (GI hemorrhage, oozing from puncture sites)
- Ascites, edema
- Renal tubular dysfunction (Fanconi syndrome: glycosuria, aminoaciduria, phosphaturia, metabolic acidosis)
- Failure to thrive
- Seizures, coma, death — in severe untreated cases
Known HFI patient with accidental exposure
- Acute episode after accidental ingestion of fructose-containing food or medication
- Rapid-onset vomiting, hypoglycemia, malaise
- May be mild (self-limited vomiting) or severe (hypoglycemia, acidosis, liver decompensation) depending on fructose load
Diagnostic clues
- Temporal relationship to food introduction: symptoms began when weaning started or when a new food/formula containing fructose or sucrose was introduced
- Aversion to sweets: older children and adults with undiagnosed HFI develop a strong natural aversion to sweet foods and fruits — this is a classic historical clue[3]
- Absence of dental caries: lifelong fructose avoidance results in remarkably healthy teeth — another diagnostic pearl[3]
- Symptoms resolve completely when fructose is removed from the diet
Differential diagnosis
Infant with vomiting, hypoglycemia, and liver failure
- Galactosemia — very similar presentation but triggered by lactose/galactose (present in breast milk and standard formula); E. coli sepsis association; cataracts; reducing substances in urine
- Tyrosinemia type 1 — liver failure + coagulopathy + very high AFP; boiled cabbage odor; Fanconi syndrome; not temporally related to specific food introduction
- Sepsis — ill-appearing; fever; positive cultures
- Neonatal hepatitis (other causes)
- Neonatal hemochromatosis (GALD) — presents at birth, not at weaning
- Glycogen storage diseases — hepatomegaly + hypoglycemia; not food-specific
- Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase deficiency — similar presentation (hypoglycemia + acidosis + hepatomegaly) but triggered by fasting rather than fructose ingestion; important to distinguish
- Urea cycle defects, organic acidemias
- Food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES) — profuse vomiting after specific food; no hypoglycemia or liver disease
Key distinguishing features of HFI
- Symptoms temporally linked to fructose/sucrose introduction
- Hypoglycemia that does NOT respond to glucagon
- Hypophosphatemia (phosphate trapping by F-1-P) — relatively specific finding
- Hyperuricemia — unusual in an infant; should raise suspicion
- Resolution with fructose withdrawal
Evaluation
ED workup
- Blood glucose: expect hypoglycemia (may be severe/refractory)
- BMP: hypophosphatemia (characteristic), metabolic acidosis, elevated creatinine (if renal involvement)
- Hepatic panel: elevated AST/ALT (hepatocellular injury); elevated bilirubin (conjugated)
- Coagulation studies: elevated PT/INR (hepatic synthetic failure in severe cases)
- Uric acid: hyperuricemia (ATP depletion → AMP breakdown → urate production)[1]
- Lactate: lactic acidosis
- Magnesium: hypermagnesemia (released from damaged cells with ATP depletion)
- CBC: thrombocytopenia (in severe hepatic failure)
- Urinalysis: glycosuria (normal blood glucose), aminoaciduria, phosphaturia (Fanconi pattern); fructosuria may be present
- Ammonia: may be elevated in severe hepatic failure
- AFP: may be elevated (liver injury; less markedly than tyrosinemia)
Characteristic laboratory constellation
Hypoglycemia + hypophosphatemia + hyperuricemia + lactic acidosis + liver dysfunction in an infant following fructose exposure = highly suspicious for HFI
Confirmatory testing (arrange via specialist)
- ALDOB gene sequencing: preferred confirmatory test; noninvasive; high sensitivity and specificity[2]
- Liver biopsy: for aldolase B enzyme activity measurement — invasive; reserved for cases where genetic testing is inconclusive
- Fructose tolerance test: NO LONGER RECOMMENDED — dangerous; causes profound hypoglycemia and can precipitate acute liver failure[4]
- Urine reducing substances: may be positive (fructosuria) after fructose ingestion; non-specific
- Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT): often abnormal in untreated HFI (secondary glycosylation defect)
Management
Acute emergency management
- Stop all fructose, sucrose, and sorbitol intake immediately — this is the single most important intervention
- IV dextrose (D10W): correct and prevent hypoglycemia with glucose-containing fluids only[1]
- Do NOT give fructose or sorbitol-containing IV solutions
- Do NOT give sucrose-containing oral medications
- Correct metabolic acidosis: sodium bicarbonate if pH <7.1 or bicarbonate severely depressed; often improves with dextrose and fructose withdrawal
- Correct coagulopathy: vitamin K, FFP if active bleeding
- Treat hepatic failure per standard protocols (see Acute liver failure)
- Monitor and correct electrolytes: phosphate supplementation if severely hypophosphatemic; monitor potassium, magnesium
- Glucagon is NOT effective for hypoglycemia in HFI — both glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis are blocked by F-1-P; give IV dextrose instead[2]
Medication safety — critical for the EM physician
- Many common pediatric liquid medications contain sorbitol or sucrose as sweeteners — these are dangerous in HFI[2]
- Before administering ANY oral medication to a known or suspected HFI patient, check the excipient/inactive ingredient list for fructose, sucrose, or sorbitol
- Safer alternatives: use tablet formulations (crushed if needed), or IV formulations
- Common offenders: acetaminophen syrups, ibuprofen suspensions, antibiotic suspensions, cough syrups, chewable tablets
- Consult pharmacy to verify medication safety
Long-term management (arrange via metabolic specialist)
- Lifelong strict dietary exclusion of fructose, sucrose, and sorbitol — this is the definitive and only treatment[1]
- Nutritionist referral — extensive dietary education required; hidden fructose sources are ubiquitous
- Vitamin and mineral supplementation — patients on fructose-free diets may develop deficiencies in vitamin C, folate, and fiber (from restricted fruit/vegetable intake)
- Life expectancy is completely normal with dietary compliance
- No liver transplant required (unlike tyrosinemia type 1 or Crigler-Najjar syndrome)
Disposition
- Infant with suspected new diagnosis (vomiting + hypoglycemia + liver dysfunction after fructose introduction):
- Admit
- Stop all fructose/sucrose/sorbitol sources
- IV dextrose, supportive care
- Metabolic/genetics consultation
- Arrange ALDOB gene testing
- Known HFI patient with mild accidental exposure (vomiting, mild hypoglycemia, no liver failure):
- Treat hypoglycemia with oral glucose or IV dextrose
- Observe until asymptomatic and blood glucose stable
- May discharge if well, tolerating fructose-free diet, glucose stable, and family is reliable
- Known HFI patient with severe exposure (liver failure, refractory hypoglycemia, acidosis):
- Admit (PICU if critically ill)
- Aggressive IV dextrose, correct acidosis and coagulopathy
- Metabolic team consultation
- Ensure all families receive:
- Written dietary guidance (fructose, sucrose, sorbitol avoidance)
- Medical alert identification for the child
- Guidance on medication safety (sorbitol in syrups)
- Metabolic specialist follow-up
See Also
- Galactosemia
- Tyrosinemia
- Fanconi syndrome
- Neonatal hepatitis
- Acute liver failure
- Hypoglycemia
- Neonatal hemochromatosis
External Links
- StatPearls — Hereditary Fructose Intolerance
- StatPearls — Fructose-1-Phosphate Aldolase Deficiency
- World J Clin Pediatr — Hereditary fructose intolerance: A comprehensive review (2022)
- Diseases — Clinical Practice Guidelines for HFI (2024)
- Orphanet — Hereditary fructose intolerance
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Hereditary Fructose Intolerance. StatPearls. NCBI. 2023.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Singh SK, Sarma MS. Hereditary fructose intolerance: A comprehensive review. World J Clin Pediatr. 2022;11(4):321-329. PMC9331401.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Hereditary fructose intolerance. Orphanet. 2024.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Hereditary fructose intolerance. Wikipedia. 2025.
