| Literature DB >> 22524701 |
Minke H de Ru1, Quirine Ga Teunissen, Johanna H van der Lee, Michael Beck, Olaf A Bodamer, Lorne A Clarke, Carla E Hollak, Shuan-Pei Lin, Maria-Verónica Muñoz Rojas, Gregory M Pastores, Julian A Raiman, Maurizio Scarpa, Eileen P Treacy, Anna Tylki-Szymanska, J Edmond Wraith, Jiri Zeman, Frits A Wijburg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I) is traditionally divided into three phenotypes: the severe Hurler (MPS I-H) phenotype, the intermediate Hurler-Scheie (MPS I-H/S) phenotype and the attenuated Scheie (MPS I-S) phenotype. However, there are no clear criteria for delineating the different phenotypes. Because decisions about optimal treatment (enzyme replacement therapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation) need to be made quickly and depend on the presumed phenotype, an assessment of phenotypic severity should be performed soon after diagnosis. Therefore, a numerical severity scale for classifying different MPS I phenotypes at diagnosis based on clinical signs and symptoms was developed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22524701 PMCID: PMC3379958 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-7-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
The item-pool used for developing the MPS I phenotype severity scale
| Items | Rated to be of major importance by ≥50% of experts and as 'redundant' by none | Not present in any of the 20 patient descriptions |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Age at onset of symptoms | x | |
| 2. Age at diagnosis | ||
| 3. Coarse facial features | ||
| 4. Abdominal hernia | ||
| 5. Inguinal hernia | ||
| 6. Developmental delay | x | |
| 7. Cognitive decline | x | x |
| 8. Hydrocephalus | x | |
| 9. Cervical cord compression | x | |
| 10. Carpal tunnel syndrome | ||
| 11. Corneal clouding | ||
| 12. Elevated ocular pressure | x | |
| 13. Recurrent upper airway infections | ||
| 14. Recurrent otitis media | ||
| 15. Hearing disorders | ||
| 16. Pulmonary function | ||
| 17. Respiratory insufficiency | x | |
| 18. Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | x | |
| 19. Valvular heart disease | ||
| 20. Cardiomyopathy | ||
| 21. Coronary artery disease | x | |
| 22. Hepatosplenomegaly | ||
| 23. Dysostosis multiplex | ||
| 24. Kyphosis | x | |
| 25. Hip dysplasia | ||
| 26. Toe walking | x | |
| 27. Joint stiffness/arthropathy/contractures | x | |
| 28. Growth retardation | ||
| 29. Premature death | x | |
| 30. Dermal melanocytosis | x | |
| 31. Positive family history | x | |
| 32. Hypertrichosis | ||
| 33. Macroglossia | ||
| 34. Hypotonia in infancy | ||
| 35. Protruded sternum | ||
| 36. Large head/frontal bossing | ||
| 37. Psychosis | x | |
| 38. Affected sibling | x | |
| 39. Early accelerated growth | x |
An overview of results during the different stages of the consensus procedure
| 'results, 1st written round' Considered to be of major importance by the majority and redundant by none of the experts | 'results, 2nd written round' Resulting from statistical comparisons of the median expert scores | 'results, consensus meeting' Final consensus list | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cognitive decline | x | ||
| Age at onset of symptoms | x | x | x |
| Developmental delay | x | x | x |
| Hydrocephalus | x | ||
| Kyphosis | x | x | x |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | x | E | |
| Joint stiffness/arthropathy/contractures | x | x | |
| Large head/frontal bossing | x | x | |
| Early diagnosis | x | ||
| Dysostosis multiplex | x | E | |
| Coarse facial features | x | ||
| Cardiomyopathy | x | ||
| Growth retardation | E |
E: excluded from the final severity scale after working group discussions
The 24 items that were proposed by the individual experts during the meeting
| Items | Number of experts who proposed each item# |
|---|---|
| 1. Global developmental delay/cognitive decline | 18 |
| 2. Age at onset of symptoms <1.5 yr | 13 |
| 3. Joint stiffness/arthropathy/contractures | 11 |
| 4. Kyphosis/spinal involvement | 11 |
| 5. Dysostosis multiplex | 10 |
| 6. Cardiac involvement: valvular disease + cardiomyopathy | 10 |
| 7. Large head/frontal bossing | 8 |
| 8. Hydrocephalus | 7 |
| 9. Age at diagnosis <1.5 yr | 7 |
| 10. Coarse facial features | 6 |
| 11. Growth retardation | 4 |
| 12. Hepatosplenomegaly | 4 |
| 13. Corneal clouding | 4 |
| 14. Pulmonary function | 4 |
| 15. Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 3 |
| 16. Hearing problems | 3 |
| 17. Cervical cord compression | 2 |
| 18. Carpal tunnel syndrome | 2 |
| 19. Abdominal hernia | 1 |
| 20. Hip dysplasia | 1 |
| 21. Recurrent otitis media | 1 |
| 22. Macroglossia | 1 |
| 23. Early surgical intervention | 1 |
| 24. Affected sibling | 1 |
# Certain items were individually mentioned by the experts but were used as a single item in the sum score (for example, developmental delay and cognitive decline were counted together); such items explain why the number of experts proposing a certain item occasionally exceeds the total number of experts
Figure 1The expert scores per patient (for the 20 case descriptions in the second written round, in order of ascending median expert score).
The 27 items occurring in the 20 case histories, in ascending order of frequency
| Items | Frequency of occurrence (%) |
|---|---|
| 1. Disturbed pulmonary function | 5 |
| 2. Hypertrichosis | 5 |
| 3. Sternum protruded | 5 |
| 4. Cardiomyopathy | 10 |
| 5. Macroglossia | 10 |
| 6. Growth retardation | 15 |
| 7. Hypotonia in infancy | 15 |
| 8. Hydrocephalus | 20 |
| 9. Carpal tunnel syndrome | 25 |
| 10. OSAS | 25 |
| 11. Hip dysplasia | 30 |
| 12. Large head/frontal bossing* | 35 |
| 13. Valvular heart disease | 40 |
| 14. Early diagnosis (<1.5 yr)* | 40 |
| 15. Inguinal hernia | 40 |
| 16. Hearing problems | 40 |
| 17. Developmental delay* | 55 |
| 18. Dysostosis multiplex* | 55 |
| 19. Kyphosis* | 65 |
| 20. Abdominal hernia | 70 |
| 21. Coarse facial features* | 70 |
| 22. Early onset of symptoms (<1.5 yr)* | 75 |
| 23. Joint stiffness/arthropathy/contractures | 80 |
| 24. Hepatosplenomegaly | 75 |
| 25. Corneal clouding | 85 |
| 26. Recurrent otitis media | 85 |
| 27. Recurrent upper airway infection | 90 |
For the items marked with an*, there was a statistically significant difference in the median expert score between the cases with and without this item.
Figure 2The expert scores per patient (for the 18 case descriptions in the validation round, in order of ascending median expert score).