Search results for "Mucopolysaccharidosis type II"

showing 10 items of 17 documents

A phase II/III clinical study of enzyme replacement therapy with idursulfase in mucopolysaccharidosis II (Hunter syndrome)

2006

Purpose: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of recombinant human iduronate-2-sulfatase (idursulfase) in the treatment of mucopolysaccharidosis II. Methods: Ninety-six mucopolysaccharidosis II patients between 5 and 31 years of age were enrolled in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Patients were randomized to placebo infusions, weekly idursulfase (0.5 mg/kg) infusions or every-other-week infusions of idursulfase (0.5 mg/kg). Efficacy was evaluated using a composite endpoint consisting of distance walked in 6 minutes and the percentage of predicted forced vital capacity based on the sum of the ranks of change from baseline. Results: Patients in the weekly and every-other-week idursul…

AdultMaleVital capacitymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentIdursulfaseVital CapacityIduronate SulfatasePlacebolaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundDouble-Blind MethodRandomized controlled trialElosulfase alfalawInternal medicinemedicineHumansMucopolysaccharidosis type IIChildGenetics (clinical)GlycoproteinsMucopolysaccharidosis IIbusiness.industryHunter syndromeDrug ToleranceEnzyme replacement therapymedicine.diseaseRecombinant ProteinsSurgerychemistryChild PreschoolSafetybusinessmedicine.drugGenetics in Medicine
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Mortality and cause of death in mucopolysaccharidosis type II-a historical review based on data from the Hunter Outcome Survey (HOS).

2009

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPS II or Hunter syndrome) is a progressive, multisystemic disease caused by a deficiency of iduronate-2-sulfatase. Patients with the severe form of the disease have cognitive impairment and typically die in the second decade of life. Patients with the less severe form do not experience significant cognitive involvement and may survive until the fifth or sixth decade of life. We studied the relationship of both severity of MPS II and the time period in which patients died with age at death in 129 patients for whom data were entered retrospectively into HOS (Hunter Outcome Survey), the only large-scale, multinational observational study of patients with MPS II.…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsAdolescentIdursulfaseIduronate SulfataseCohort StudiesYoung AdultCause of DeathEpidemiologyGeneticsmedicineHumansMucopolysaccharidosis type IIYoung adultChildGenetics (clinical)Cause of deathMucopolysaccharidosis IIRetrospective StudiesMPS type IIbusiness.industryData CollectionAge FactorsInfantHunter syndromeEnzyme replacement therapymedicine.diseaseSurgeryTreatment OutcomeChild PreschoolFemaleSettore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREEbusinessmedicine.drugCohort studyJournal of inherited metabolic disease
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Effects of enzyme replacement therapy on growth in patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type II

2010

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPS II; Hunter syndrome) is an X-linked, recessive, lysosomal storage disorder caused by deficiency of iduronate-2-sulfatase. It has multisystemic involvement, with manifestations in the brain, upper respiratory tract, heart, abdomen, joints and bones. Bone involvement leads to decreased growth velocity and short stature in nearly all patients. A therapeutic option for patients with MPS II is enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with idursulfase (Elaprase®). We compared annual growth rates before and during ERT in 18 patients from Mainz, Germany, and Manchester, UK. Group 1 included nine patients who started ERT before 10 years of age; group 2 contained nine patie…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtycongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesAdolescentIdursulfaseIduronate SulfatasePlaceboShort staturePlacebosYoung AdultChild DevelopmentClinical Trials Phase II as TopicmedicineGeneticsHumansGenetics(clinical)Enzyme Replacement TherapyMucopolysaccharidosis type IIYoung adultGrowth ChartsChildGenetics (clinical)Mucopolysaccharidosis IIbusiness.industrynutritional and metabolic diseasesHunter syndromeEnzyme replacement therapymedicine.diseaseBody HeightSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureClinical Trials Phase III as TopicAbdomenOriginal Articlemedicine.symptombusinessmedicine.drugJournal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
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Safety study of sodium pentosan polysulfate for adult patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type II

2019

Current therapies for the mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) do not effectively address skeletal and neurological manifestations. Pentosan polysulfate (PPS) is an alternative treatment strategy that has been shown to improve bone architecture, mobility, and neuroinflammation in MPS animals. The aims of this study were to a) primarily establish the safety of weekly PPS injections in attenuated MPS II, b) assess the efficacy of treatment on MPS pathology, and c) define appropriate clinical endpoints and biomarkers for future clinical trials. Subcutaneous injections were administered to three male Japanese patients for 12 weeks. Enzyme replacement therapy was continued in two of the patients while th…

Drug0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismClinical BiochemistryeducationUrologymucopolysaccharidosis IIBiochemistryArticlePPSrange of motion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyInternal medicineClinical endpointglycosaminoglycanGeneticsMedicineMucopolysaccharidosis type IIAdverse effectMolecular Biologyhealth care economics and organizationsmedia_commonbiologyAdult patientsanti-inflammatory factorbusiness.industryEnzyme replacement therapyPentosan polysulfateClinical trial030104 developmental biologyAlanine transaminasebiology.proteinSodium Pentosan Polysulfatebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedicine.drugMolecular Genetics and Metabolism
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Molecular basis of mucopolysaccharidosis type II: Mutations in the iduronate-2-sulphatase gene

1993

A number of mutations in the X-chromosomal human iduronate-2-sulphatase gene have now been identified as the primary genetic defect leading to the clinical condition known as Hunter syndrome or mucopolysaccharidosis type II. The mutations that are tabulated include different deletions, splice-site and point mutations. From the group of 319 patients thus far studied by Southern analysis, 14 have a full deletion of the gene and 48 have a partial deletion or other gross rearrangements. All patients with full deletions or gross rearrangements have severe clinical presentations. Twenty-nine different "small" mutations have so far been characterised in a total of 32 patients. These include 4 nons…

GeneticsMutationPoint mutationIduronate-2-sulfataseHunter syndromeIduronate SulfataseBiologymedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeMolecular biologyFrameshift mutationMutationGenotypeGeneticsmedicineHumansPoint MutationMissense mutationMucopolysaccharidosis type IIGene DeletionGenetics (clinical)Mucopolysaccharidosis IIHuman Mutation
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123 MOLECULAR GENETIC ANALYSIS IN HUNTER DISEASE

1991

Clinical and biochemical studies have revealed a great phenotypic variability in mucopolysaccharidosis type II (Hunter disease), probably due to different mutations in the IDS gene that has been localized in Xq28. Using a cDNA probe containing almost the entire coding region of the human IDS gene, we performed a molecular analysis on 7 patients with Hunter disease. In one patient, a complete deletion of the IDS coding sequences was found. Another patient had structural alterations of the IDS gene including a partial deletion. In 5 patients, however, after restriction digestion of the DNA by PstI and TaqI and Southern hybridization with the IDS cDNA, the audiographic patterns obtained were s…

GeneticsTaqIPoint mutationBiologyMolecular biologyXq28chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryComplementary DNAPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthCoding regionMucopolysaccharidosis type IIGeneSouthern blotPediatric Research
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Importance of surgical history in diagnosing mucopolysaccharidosis type II (Hunter syndrome): data from the Hunter Outcome Survey.

2010

Purpose: To characterize surgical histories typical of patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type II, thereby broadening understanding of the natural history of these patients and helping physicians recognize the disease. Methods: Data on surgical interventions from the Hunter Outcome Survey—a multinational, observational database of patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type II—were analyzed. The study population comprised 527 patients for whom surgical data were reported on/before July 23, 2009. Results: Surgical interventions were performed in 83.7% of the study population. Patients underwent their first operation at a median age of 2.6 years. Tympanostomies, repairs of inguinal hernias, and…

MalePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentMucopolysaccharidosisPopulationYoung AdultAge DistributionmedicineHumansHerniaMucopolysaccharidosis type IIChildeducationCarpal tunnel syndromeGenetics (clinical)Mucopolysaccharidosis IIeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryData CollectionInfantHunter syndromemedicine.diseaseSurgeryNatural historyTreatment OutcomeChild PreschoolSurgical Procedures OperativeHunter syndromePopulation studySettore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREEbusiness
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Deletion of the Hunter gene and both DXS466 and DXS304 in a patient with mucopolysaccharidosis type II.

1992

Hunter syndrome is an X-linked mucopoly-saccharidosis due to deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS). A cDNA clone containing the entire coding region of the human IDS gene, mapped in Xq28, has been used as molecular probe to study a patient with Hunter syndrome. A submicroscopic deletion has been detected that spans the IDS gene as well as DXS466 and DXS304, 2 loci mapped probably not more than 900 kb from the IDS locus. A detailed clinical description of the patient is provided and his phenotype is compared to that of other patients with IDS deletion described recently. By following the segregation of a restriction fragment length polymorphism at the IDS locus in th…

MaleX ChromosomeLocus (genetics)Iduronate SulfataseBiologyGene mappingmedicineHumansMucopolysaccharidosis type IIChildGenetics (clinical)X chromosomeMucopolysaccharidosis IIGeneticsIduronate-2-sulfataseChromosome MappingHunter syndromeDNAmedicine.diseaseXq28PedigreeBlotting SouthernFemaleRestriction fragment length polymorphismChromosome DeletionPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthAmerican journal of medical genetics
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Molecular analysis in patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type II suggests that DXS466 maps within the Hunter gene

1993

Hunter disease is an X-linked mucopolysaccharidosis caused by deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS). Using the IDS cDNA and DNA probes corresponding to loci flanking the IDS locus, we performed molecular genetic studies in two patients with Hunter syndrome. An interstitial deletion spanning the middle part of the IDS gene was found in the first patient. The second patient carries a gross gene rearrangement that can be detected after HindIII or EcoRI digestion of genomic DNA, and is similar to that found recently in seven unrelated Hunter patients. Our data suggest that the structural aberration observed is a partial intragenic inversion. As the same altered hybridiz…

MaleX ChromosomeRestriction MappingLocus (genetics)Iduronate SulfataseHindIIIDeoxyribonuclease EcoRIGeneticsmedicineHumansMucopolysaccharidosis type IIChildDeoxyribonucleases Type II Site-SpecificGenetics (clinical)Mucopolysaccharidosis IIGeneticsbiologyHybridization probeHunter syndromeGene rearrangementmedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyBlotting Southerngenomic DNAChild Preschoolbiology.proteinRestriction fragment length polymorphismDNA ProbesPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthHuman Genetics
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Cumulative incidence rates of the mucopolysaccharidoses in Germany

2005

In order to estimate the cumulative incidence rates of the mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) in Germany, a retrospective epidemiological survey covering the period between 1980 and 1995 was implemented. Multiple ascertainment sources were used to identify affected patients. A prevalence of approximately 0.69 cases per 100,000 births was obtained for MPS I (Hurler phenotype). Within the study period, 4 patients with Hurler/Scheie phenotype and 7 cases with Scheie disease were detected. The cumulative incidence for MPS II (Hunter syndrome) was estimated as 0.64 cases per 100,000 births (1.3 cases per 100,000 male live births); that for MPS III (Sanfilippo syndrome types A, B and C) as 1.57 cases in…

Malecongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyMorquio syndromeGenotypeTurkeyMucopolysaccharidosisMucopolysaccharidosis type IIIGermanyGeneticsmedicineHumansCumulative incidenceMucopolysaccharidosis type IIskin and connective tissue diseasesGenetics (clinical)Retrospective StudiesSanfilippo syndromebusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)nutritional and metabolic diseasesHunter syndromeMucopolysaccharidosesHospital Recordsbeta-Galactosidasemedicine.diseasePhenotypeFemalebusinessJournal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
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