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Longitudinal Natural History of Pediatric Subjects Affected with Mucopolysaccharidosis IIIB

Authors :
Ilyas Okur
Fatih Ezgu
Roberto Giugliani
Nicole Muschol
Anja Koehn
Hernan Amartino
Paul Harmatz
Maria J. de Castro Lopez
Maria Luz Couce
Shuan-Pei Lin
Spyros Batzios
Maureen Cleary
Martha Solano
Heidi Peters
Joy Lee
Igor Nestrasil
Adam J. Shaywitz
Stephen M. Maricich
Bernice Kuca
Joseph Kovalchin
Eric Zanelli
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 249
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To characterize the longitudinal natural history of disease progression in pediatric subjects affected with mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) IIIB.Sixty-five children with a confirmed diagnosis of MPS IIIB were enrolled into 1 of 2 natural history studies and followed for up to 4 years. Cognitive and adaptive behavior functions were analyzed in all subjects, and volumetric magnetic resonance imaging analysis of liver, spleen, and brain, as well as levels of heparan sulfate (HS) and heparan sulfate nonreducing ends (HS-NRE), were measured in a subset of subjects.The majority of subjects with MPS IIIB achieved an apex on both cognition and adaptive behavior age equivalent scales between age 3 and 6 years. Development quotients for both cognition and adaptive behavior follow a linear trajectory by which subjects reach a nadir with a score25 for an age equivalent of 24 months by age 8 years on average and by 13.5 years at the latest. All tested subjects (n = 22) had HS and HS-NRE levels above the normal range in cerebrospinal fluid and plasma, along with signs of hepatomegaly. Subjects lost an average of 26 mL of brain volume (-2.7%) over 48 weeks, owing entirely to a loss of cortical gray matter (32 mL; -6.5%).MPS IIIB exists along a continuum based on cognitive decline and cortical gray matter atrophy. Although a few individuals with MPS IIIB have an attenuated phenotype, the majority follow predicted trajectories for both cognition and adaptive behavior.ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers NCT02493998, NCT03227042, and NCT02754076.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
249
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06ad41235c50033b04013663829af070