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First Report of a Patient with MPS Type VII, Due to Novel Mutations in GUSB, Who Underwent Enzyme Replacement and Then Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation.

Patricia DubotFrédérique SabourdyGeneviève PlatCharlotte JubertClaude CancèsPierre BrouéGuy TouatiThierry Levade
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2019)
We report the case of a boy who was diagnosed with mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) VII at two weeks of age. He harbored three missense β-glucuronidase (GUSB) variations in exon 3: two novel, c.422A>C and c.424C>T, inherited from his mother, and the rather common c.526C>T, inherited from his father. Expression of these variations in transfected HEK293T cells demonstrated that the double mutation c.422A>C;424C>T reduces β-glucuronidase enzyme activity. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), using UX003 (vestronidase alfa), was started at four months of age, followed by a hematopoietic stem cell allograft transplantation (HSCT) at 13 months of age. ERT was well tolerated and attenuated visceromegaly and skin infiltration. After a severe skin and gut graft-versus-host disease, ERT was stopped six months after HSCT. The last follow-up examination (at the age of four years) revealed a normal psychomotor development, stabilized growth curve, no hepatosplenomegaly, and no other organ involvement. Intriguingly, enzyme activity had normalized in leukocytes but remained low in plasma. This case report illustrates: (i) The need for an early diagnosis of MPS, and (ii) the possible benefit of a very early enzymatic and/or cellular therapy in this rare form of lysosomal storage disease.
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