Clinical Department of Laboratory Medicine, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Center for Metabolic Diseases, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
J Inherit Metab Dis. 2018 Jan;41(1):101-108. doi: 10.1007/s10545-017-0089-4. Epub 2017 Oct 4.
Isolated sulfite oxidase deficiency (ISOD) is a life-threatening, autosomal recessive disease characterized by severe neurological impairment. As no long-term effective treatment is available, distinction from other treatable diseases, such as molybdenum cofactor deficiency (MoCD) type A, should be made. We reviewed 47 patients (45 previously reported in the literature). Cases were reviewed for consanguinity, sex, age at onset, death, clinical findings (including spasticity, seizures, psychomotor retardation, feeding difficulties, ectopia lentis, microcephaly), laboratory findings [urinary sulfite, S-sulfocysteine (in plasma and urine), plasma cystine, total homocysteine, uric acid, and oxypurines in urine] and radiological findings (including cerebral/cerebellar atrophy, cystic white matter changes, ventriculomegaly). We also aligned the published SUOX gene mutations to the reference sequence NM_000456.2. Onset occurred mostly during the first 72 h of life (57%) and within the first year of life in all but two patients (96%). All patients presented with neurological abnormalities, such as neonatal axial hypotonia and/or peripheral hypertonia (100%), (pharmacoresistant) seizures (84%), or developmental delay (97%). Feeding problems were also common. As found in our review, measurement of homocysteine in plasma, amino acids in plasma/urine, and sulfite in fresh urine supports the diagnosis of ISOD. Analysis of uric acid (plasma) and oxypurines (urine) is useful to rule out MoCD. In all patients in whom brain magnetic resonance imaging/computed tomography (MRI/CT) was performed, brain abnormalities were found. The purpose of this literature review is to provide a thorough overview of clinical, neuroimaging, biochemical, and genetic findings of patients with ISOD.
孤立型亚硫酸氧化酶缺乏症(ISOD)是一种危及生命的常染色体隐性疾病,其特征是严重的神经损伤。由于目前尚无长期有效的治疗方法,因此应与其他可治疗的疾病(如钼辅因子缺乏症(MoCD)A型)相鉴别。我们回顾了 47 名患者(45 例先前在文献中报道过)。对病例进行了血缘关系、性别、发病年龄、死亡、临床发现(包括痉挛、癫痫发作、精神运动发育迟缓、喂养困难、晶状体异位、小头畸形)、实验室检查结果(包括尿液中亚硫酸盐、血浆和尿液中的 S-磺基半胱氨酸、血浆胱氨酸、总同型半胱氨酸、尿酸和尿液中的氧嘌呤)和影像学检查结果(包括大脑/小脑萎缩、囊性白质改变、脑室扩大)进行了回顾。我们还将已发表的 SUOX 基因突变与参考序列 NM_000456.2 进行了比对。发病大多发生在生命的前 72 小时内(57%),除了两名患者(96%)外,均在生命的第一年发生。所有患者均出现神经系统异常,如新生儿轴性张力减退和/或周围性张力亢进(100%)、(药物难治性)癫痫发作(84%)或发育迟缓(97%)。喂养问题也很常见。正如我们的综述中所发现的,血浆同型半胱氨酸、血浆/尿液中的氨基酸以及新鲜尿液中的亚硫酸盐的测量有助于 ISOD 的诊断。尿酸(血浆)和氧嘌呤(尿液)的分析有助于排除 MoCD。在所有进行脑磁共振成像/计算机断层扫描(MRI/CT)的患者中,均发现了脑部异常。本文献综述的目的是全面概述 ISOD 患者的临床、神经影像学、生化和遗传发现。