6533b85efe1ef96bd12c0901

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Scheie syndrome: enzyme replacement therapy does not prevent progression of cervical myelopathy due to spinal cord compression.

Sabine IllsingerHans HartmannWibke Müller-forellThomas LückeEugen MengelFrank DonnerstagAnibh M. Das

subject

Adultcongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesmedicine.medical_specialtyMucopolysaccharidosis IMyelopathyIduronidaseSpinal cord compressionMucopolysaccharidosis IGeneticsmedicineHumansEnzyme Replacement TherapyHurler syndromeGenetics (clinical)business.industryHematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantationnutritional and metabolic diseasesBrainEnzyme replacement therapymedicine.diseaseSpinal cordSurgeryTransplantationmedicine.anatomical_structureCervical VertebraeDisease ProgressionFemaleScheie syndromebusinessSpinal Cord Compression

description

Hurler-Scheie syndrome is caused by alpha-l-iduronidase deficiency. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) can improve physical capacity and reduces organomegaly. However, the effect on bradytrophic connective tissue is limited. As intravenously administered enzyme cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, the therapy of choice for the more severe Hurler syndrome is haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT). In the more attenuated Scheie syndrome, neurological impairment is less severe; therefore, ERT may be appropriate to treat these patients. Information on long-term outcome in Scheie patients undergoing ERT is scarce. We report a 38-year-old female Scheie patient who has been on ERT for 8 years. While non-neurological symptoms improved, she developed paresthesias in her hands and feet and progressive pain in her legs. Somatosensory evoked potentials were abnormal, suggesting dysfunction of the dorsal funiculus and lemniscus medialis. After 6 years of ERT, a spinal MRI showed dural thickening at the upper cervical spine. These soft-tissue deposits are presumably due to the accumulation of mucopolysaccharides. Intramedullary hyperintensities at the level of C1/2 revealed cervical myelopathy. An MRI before the start of ERT had shown milder spinal lesions. Cystic lesions in the white matter of the centrum semiovale due to dilated Virchow-Robin spaces were essentially unchanged compared with the MRI scan before ERT. Decompression of the spinal cord resulted in clinical improvement. In an adult patient with Scheie syndrome, ERT failed to prevent progression of cervical myelopathy. Clinical significance of cerebral changes is unclear. Whether early HCT or intrathecal ERT could have prevented these lesions remains speculative.

10.1007/s10545-009-1265-yhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19894140