Clinical Description
GM3 synthase deficiency likely represents a spectrum of disease severity [Inamori & Inokuchi 2022]. Affected individuals were initially described in special populations and consanguineous families, but continue to be identified in more general populations over time. To date, more than 100 individuals from more than a dozen families have been identified with GM3 synthase deficiency in the published literature [Inamori & Inokuchi 2022]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Table 2.
Select Features of GM3 Synthase Deficiency
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Feature | % of Persons w/Feature 1 | Comment |
---|
Irritability | >90% |
|
Epilepsy | >90% |
|
Growth failure & microcephaly | >90% | Microcephaly is typically acquired (postnatal). |
Developmental delay / intellectual disability | >90% | Typically in the profound range |
Hypotonia | >90% | Typically mild, beginning in infancy |
Dystonia & other movement disorders | >90% | Dystonia & other hyperkinetic movements are later manifestations. |
Hearing impairment | >80% | Most fail newborn hearing screening |
Frequent otitis media & pneumonia | >80% | If present, typically occurs during infancy & early childhood |
Visual impairment | >70% |
|
Gastrointestinal issues | >70% | GERD, constipation, & emesis may be present. |
Feeding difficulties | >60% | Often presenting along w/severe irritability during infancy |
Skin pigmentation anomalies | ~50% |
|
Scoliosis | >30%-99% 1 | Almost universal in late childhood & adolescence |
GERD = gastroesophageal reflux disease
- 1.
Some features may develop and/or progress over time, making the estimate of the number of affected individuals who have each feature dependent on age at the time of evaluation.
Irritability and other behavioral issues. In infancy, episodic severe irritability may predominate. Caregivers may report completely sleepless nights accompanied by generalized irritability described as inconsolability and agitation for most of time spent awake. Self-injury may accompany these episodes as the children grow older, with banging, biting, and scratching of limbs described. Increased agitation may be associated with constipation and acute illness, but there has not been a consistent trigger identified for increased agitation. While irritability tends to moderate with age, it can be a source of great duress for caregivers [Bowser et al 2019].
Hypotonia. Mild-to-moderate generalized or axial hypotonia with or without lower extremity spasticity may be noted in the neonatal period and detected as early as the first week of life. Hyoptonia is typically present in all affected individuals before the age of six months, but has also been reported as developing after infancy. Motor delays or poor head control may be the most obvious initial manifestation of the hypotonia [Fragaki et al 2013, Lee et al 2016, Bowser et al 2019, Indellicato et al 2019].
Microcephaly is not typically present at birth. However, postnatal deceleration in head growth leads to age- and sex-adjusted z scores for occipital frontal circumference (OFC) dropping to more than two standard deviations below the mean before the second year of life. After this early deceleration phase, z scores tend to stabilize and typically do not progress through the remainder of life [Authors, personal observations].
Developmental delay and intellectual disability. Affected individuals typically have severe-to-profound developmental delay and intellectual disability after a period of stagnated motor development.
Children may briefly meet early developmental milestones, despite hypotonia, until onset of seizure activity. However, few affected individuals achieve early developmental milestones, consistent with infantile-onset developmental arrest.
Ultimately, most affected individuals are nonverbal, lack purposeful movements, and are wheelchair bound with little or no expressive or receptive language skills. However, there are a few cases of ambulatory individuals who may represent a milder form of the disorder.
Epilepsy. Intractable seizures that begin during infancy are a nearly universal finding among individuals with GM3 synthase deficiency; however, a handful of individuals with milder phenotypes have been reported with delayed onset or without clinical evidence of seizures [Lee et al 2016]. Most children are reported to have been started on at least one anti-seizure medication (ASM) by age 3.5 months, and more than half require multiple medications. There is no specific drug or class of ASM that has been reported superior in treating GM3 synthase deficiency-associated epilepsy, and ASMs remain only partially effective (see Management) [Bowser et al 2019].
Seizures typically begin in infancy around the time of developmental stagnation and with EEG studies consistent with epileptic encephalopathy.
There is no single seizure type that is typical or pathognomonic for GM3 synthase deficiency. Seizures can range from focal to generalized, with or without motor onset.
Generalized tonic-clonic seizures were the most commonly reported by
Bowser et al [2019], and EEG studies showed that most seizures (72%) were clinically silent [
Bowser et al 2019].
EEG findings. EEG studies are likely to be abnormal in at least 90% of those with GM3 synthase deficiency, even without evidence of clinical seizures [Bowser et al 2019]. Therefore, the majority of electrographic seizures in affected children are clinically silent. EEG findings may include the following:
Disorganized backgrounds, multifocal discharges, and absent sleep/wake cycles
Background slow spike-and-wave patterns (found in 75%) and hypsarrhythmia
These EEG findings may fulfill clinical criteria for epilepsy syndromes, including Lennox-Gestaut syndrome or West syndrome.
Dystonia and other hyperkinetic movement disorders. Symptoms of dystonia have been described primarily in affected adolescents and young adults. Movement disorders are also common but typically not present in the newborn or infant period. There is variability in severity and age of onset for both dystonia and movement disorders.
Bruxism, torticollis, torsion, and various other dystonic findings have been variably reported in individual cases.
Neuroimaging. Reported neuroimaging findings are highly variable with most reported as normal.
Growth issues. Prenatal growth, prenatal anatomy scans, and growth parameters at delivery are described as unremarkable in nearly all affected children [Simpson et al 2004, Fragaki et al 2013, Boccuto et al 2014, Wang et al 2016, Indellicato et al 2019]. When compared to unaffected sibs, there is no significant difference in growth parameters at the time of birth [Wang et al 2016]. However, similar to what occurs with head size, postnatal growth deceleration is profound, with most age- and sex-adjusted z scores for length/height and weight dropping to more than two standard deviations below the mean before the second year of life, where they typically remain for the remainder of life [Gordon-Lipkin et al 2018, Bowser et al 2019, Indellicato et al 2019, Heide et al 2022]. There is no intervention that has permanently corrected this severe growth restriction.
Gastrointestinal issues / feeding difficulties. Gastrointestinal issues consistent with dysmotility are reported in the majority of affected individuals. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), constipation, and recurrent vomiting are reported in more than 70% of affected individuals [Bowser et al 2019].
Poor feeding in infancy is reported in nearly all affected children. It may be the presenting symptom, as it often precedes the onset of seizures, growth failure, or developmental delay.
Feeding difficulties are often accompanied by irritability.
No particular formula or diet has been shown to improve feeding, and assisted feeding may be necessary.
Improved weight gain and growth improvements with oral ganglioside supplementation and nutritional support with gastrostomy tube (G-tube) placement have both been reported (see
Management), but neither has produced lasting changes in growth parameters, suggesting that growth failure may not be driven by poor feeding [
Wang et al 2016,
Bowser et al 2019,
Wang et al 2019].
Hearing impairment. Nearly all affected individuals tested have abnormal hearing screening in the newborn period, with absent distortion-product otoacoustic emissions and absent middle ear muscle reflexes at all frequencies, if evaluated. Auditory brain stem responses are abnormal at this time, and cochlear microphonics are absent [Yoshikawa et al 2015, Bowser et al 2019, Wang et al 2019]. Due to severe-to-profound developmental delay and intellectual disability, the degree of hearing impairment may be hard to determine.
Visual impairment. Early visual impairment is present in most affected individuals beginning in the newborn period, with visual inattentiveness (66%), roving eye movements (30%), or strabismus (30%) as the first symptom of visual concern.
Visual evoked potentials and ERGs may be normal, indicating retained retinal function as late as the teenage years, and are likely not beneficial in the diagnosis of GM synthase deficiency.
There are variable reports of optic nerve pallor on standard funduscopic examination.
Optic atrophy in combination with visual cortical blindness is likely to cause permanent and irreversible vision loss without known treatments [
Farukhi et al 2006,
Heide et al 2022].
Skin. Abnormal skin pigmentation originally described as "salt and pepper" is found in approximately half of affected individuals by a mean age of six years, but is not present at birth [Wang et al 2013].
The skin findings are flat macules, typically lentigo-sized, that can be either hypo- or hyperpigmented, found on the dorsal aspect of hands and feet. These lesions are often mistaken for freckles.
Lesions may be "dynamic" and spontaneously resolve or worsen over time without clear cause.
Skin findings may be less obvious on individuals with lighter skin tones.
The presence of typical skin findings may be helpful in the diagnosis of older individuals; however, they are not seen in infancy or early childhood, nor are they constant. Therefore, a lack of skin changes does not preclude the diagnosis.
Other long-term complications
Frequent otitis media and pneumonia have been reported as common long-term comorbidities of GM3 synthase deficiency, although there has been no evidence of immune dysfunction in affected individuals [
Bowser et al 2019].
Prognosis. The median age of death in the literature is 23.5 years, and the most common cause of death is complications of pneumonia [Bowser et al 2019]. In addition, several cases of acute, idiopathic hyperthermia in the second or third decade of life, without evidence of infection, resulting in death within several hours of onset have been observed in a large Old Order Amish cohort [Authors, personal observations].