Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS)
1. Definition
- Definition: A group of hereditary, progressive lysosomal storage disorders caused by pathogenic variants in genes encoding lysosomal enzymes required for the degradation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs).
- Pathophysiology:
- Deficiency of specific lysosomal enzymes leads to the failure of stepwise degradation of GAGs (heparan sulfate, dermatan sulfate, keratan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate).
- Undegraded GAG fragments accumulate within lysosomes, causing lysosomal distension and cellular dysfunction.
- Accumulation leads to progressive damage to connective tissue, cartilage, bone, and visceral organs.
- Neurotoxicity: Impaired degradation of heparan sulfate is strongly associated with intellectual disability and CNS degeneration.
- Mesenchymal toxicity: Accumulation of dermatan, chondroitin, and keratan sulfate primarily causes skeletal and mesenchymal abnormalities.
2. Epidemiology and Genetics
- Prevalence: Birth prevalence varies from 1.2 (USA) to 16.9 (Saudi Arabia) per 100,000 births.
- Most Common Types: MPS III is often the most common, followed by MPS I and MPS II.
- Inheritance:
- Autosomal Recessive (AR): All MPS types (I, III, IV, VI, VII, IX).
- X-Linked Recessive (XLR): MPS II (Hunter Syndrome).
3. Classification
| Type | Eponym | Enzyme Defect | GAG Stored | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPS I | Hurler (I-H) Scheie (I-S) |
Heparan & Dermatan Sulfate | Severe somatic & CNS (Hurler); Normal IQ, corneal clouding (Scheie). | |
| MPS II | Hunter | Iduronate-2-sulfatase | Heparan & Dermatan Sulfate | X-linked; No corneal clouding; Pebble skin lesions; CNS in severe form. |
| MPS III | Sanfilippo (A-D) | A: Heparan-N-sulfatase B: C: Acetyl-CoA transferase D: N-acetylglucosamine-6-sulfatase |
Heparan Sulfate | Predominant CNS/behavioral symptoms; Mild somatic features. |
| MPS IV | Morquio (A, B) | A: Galactose-6-sulfatase B: |
Keratan Sulfate | Skeletal dysplasia (short trunk); Odontoid hypoplasia; Normal IQ; Corneal clouding. |
| MPS VI | Maroteaux-Lamy | Arylsulfatase B | Dermatan Sulfate | Severe somatic features (Hurler-like); Normal IQ; Corneal clouding. |
| MPS VII | Sly | Heparan, Dermatan, Chondroitin | Hydrops fetalis (severe) to mild forms. | |
| MPS IX | - | Hyaluronidase | Hyaluronan | Periarticular masses; No Hurler phenotype. |
4. Clinical Features
A. General Phenotype (Hurler-like)
- Facies: Coarse features, frontal bossing, depressed nasal bridge, macroglossia, gingival hypertrophy.
- Skeletal: Short stature, dysostosis multiplex, joint stiffness/contractures, claw hands.
- Visceral: Hepatosplenomegaly, inguinal/umbilical hernias.
- Ocular: Corneal clouding (ground-glass appearance), retinal degeneration, glaucoma.
- ENT: Recurrent otitis media, hearing loss (conductive/sensorineural), noisy breathing, obstructive sleep apnea.
- Cardiac: Valvular disease (mitral/aortic regurgitation or stenosis), cardiomyopathy, coronary artery narrowing.
- CNS: Developmental delay, regression, communicating hydrocephalus.
B. Specific Syndromes
- MPS I (Hurler) [Severe]:
- Onset 6β24 months; death by 10 years.
- Severe intellectual disability, corneal clouding, pronounced dysostosis.
- Scheie (Mild): Onset >5 years; normal IQ, corneal clouding, aortic valve disease, joint stiffness.
- MPS II (Hunter):
- Distinguishing Feature: Clear corneas (no clouding).
- Skin: Grouped skin papules (pebble-like) over scapula/thighs.
- Extensive Mongolian spots may be an early marker.
- Behavioral issues and neurodegeneration in severe form; normal IQ in mild form.
- MPS III (Sanfilippo):
- "CNS severe, Somatic mild": Severe behavioral problems (aggression, hyperactivity), sleep disturbance, progressive dementia.
- Somatic features are mild; diagnosis often delayed.
- MPS IV (Morquio):
- "Skeletal severe, CNS normal": Short-trunk dwarfism, pectus carinatum, genu valgum.
- Critical: Odontoid hypoplasia leading to atlantoaxial instability and cervical myelopathy (lifesaving fusion needed).
- Ligamentous laxity (unlike other MPS which have stiffness).
- MPS VI (Maroteaux-Lamy):
- Phenotype resembles Hurler (severe somatic) but with preserved intelligence.
- Risk of cervical cord compression from dural thickening.
5. Radiological Features: Dysostosis Multiplex
- Skull: Macrocephaly, thickened calvarium, J-shaped sella turcica.
- Spine: Ovoid/immature vertebral bodies, anterior beaking (often L1/L2), gibbus deformity/kyphosis.
- Chest: Oar-shaped ribs (wide anteriorly, narrow posteriorly), short thick clavicles.
- Pelvis: Flared iliac wings, shallow acetabula.
- Long Bones: Shortened, thickened diaphyses, irregular metaphyses.
- Hands: Bullet-shaped metacarpals, proximal pointing of metacarpals, V-shaped deformity.
6. Diagnosis
- Screening:
- Urine GAG Analysis: Quantitative (total GAGs) and Qualitative (electrophoresis for specific pattern).
- Note: Morquio (Keratan sulfate) may be missed on standard urine screens.
- Urine GAG Analysis: Quantitative (total GAGs) and Qualitative (electrophoresis for specific pattern).
- Confirmatory:
- Enzyme Assay: Gold standard. Measured in leukocytes, plasma, or fibroblasts.
- Molecular Genetics: Gene panel or sequencing (essential for carrier testing in Hunter/X-linked).
- Prenatal Diagnosis:
- Enzyme assay or DNA analysis on Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS) or amniocytes.
7. Management
- Definitive Therapy:
- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT):
- Standard of care for MPS I-H (Hurler) if performed early (<24 months).
- Prevents cognitive decline, improves hepatosplenomegaly, facial features, and cardiac findings.
- Also used in MPS II, VI, and VII.
- Does not correct skeletal dysplasia effectively.
- Enzyme Replacement Therapy (ERT):
- Recombinant enzymes available for MPS I, II, IV, VI, VII.
- Improves somatic features (visceromegaly, endurance, apnea) but does not cross blood-brain barrier (no effect on CNS).
- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT):
- Supportive Care:
- Neurosurgical: Shunt for hydrocephalus; cervical decompression/fusion for atlantoaxial instability (esp. Morquio, MPS VI).
- ENT: Tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy for airway obstruction; hearing aids.
- Cardiac: Valve replacement for severe regurgitation.
- Ophthalmology: Corneal transplant (if severe clouding).
- Orthopedic: Surgical correction of hip dysplasia, genu valgum, carpal tunnel release.
8. Prognosis
- Severe forms (Hurler, severe Hunter): Death in 1st or 2nd decade (respiratory/cardiac failure).
- Attenuated forms (Scheie, mild Hunter): Normal life expectancy possible.
- Morquio: Risk of sudden death from cervical cord compression; respiratory compromise due to chest wall deformity.