Clinical Description
SPTLC1-related hereditary sensory neuropathy (HSN) is usually first noticed when painless injuries appear. Onset ranges from the teens to the sixth decade. Later, positive sensory phenomena occur (numbness, paresthesia, burning, and shooting pains). Shooting pains may be a distinctive but variable feature of SPTLC1-related HSN.
If the sensory loss is unheeded, chronic ulcerations of the extremities may lead to osteomyelitis and require amputations. Neuropathic joints are common.
Weakness commences in the distal lower limbs, followed by the distal upper limbs and in severe cases, proximal upper- and lower-limb girdle muscles. Distal muscle weakness and wasting are present in all advanced cases. The weakness of ankle flexors produces a floppy, flipper-like foot rather than pes cavus.
A few instances of early severe motor involvement have been reported [Houlden et al 2006].
Older affected individuals may require a wheelchair for mobility.
Retained and even brisk proximal reflexes in some affected individuals may indicate some upper motor neuron involvement. Corticospinal degeneration was not observed on an autopsy of an individual with SPTLC1-related HSN, but data are limited.
Sensorineural hearing loss is variable. When present, its onset is in middle to late adulthood.
Rarely, pupillary abnormalities termed "tonic pupils" or pseudo-Argyll-Robertson pupils (i.e., those not associated with syphilis) are present.
Visceral autonomic features are rare [Nicholson, unpublished data], with abdominal pain, diarrhea, and weight loss reported in some individuals in one family only [Houlden et al 2006].
Electrophysiology is initially normal and is not useful for early detection [Author, personal observation].
Sensory nerve action potentials are reduced only late in the disease.
Motor nerve conduction velocities are normal until motor action potential amplitudes become reduced.
Motor nerve conduction velocities are mildly slowed and motor action potentials are reduced in advanced cases.
Sural nerve biopsy shows axonal degeneration with loss of both small and large fibers. These findings are nonspecific and not diagnostic.
Neuropathology. The disease process affects the axons and cell bodies of dorsal root ganglia neurons and motor neurons in the anterior horns of the spinal cord. Studies show a distal axonal degeneration with loss of unmyelinated, small myelinated, and large myelinated fibers with decreasing severity in that order, proceeding to ganglion cell loss [Houlden et al 2006, Auer-Grumbach 2013]. See review in Thomas [1993].
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
SPTLC1 pathogenic variants at Ser331, including p.Ser331Phe [Suh et al 2014] and p.Ser331Tyr [Rotthier et al 2009, Auer-Grumbach 2013], are associated with severe childhood-onset motor and sensory neuropathy (generally without skin ulceration as in classic HSAN1A). Affected individuals have muscle atrophy (which may include atrophy of the tongue), hypotonia, growth deficiency, intellectual disability (in some individuals), cataracts, and laryngeal involvement. Disease is caused by accumulation of toxic sphingolipids [Auer-Grumbach 2013]. The general absence of skin ulceration in these severe childhood-onset neuropathies may be explained by slow accumulation of toxic sphingolipids. (One individual, described by Suh et al [2014], was reported to have skin ulceration.)
An individual with pathogenic variant p.Ser331Tyr was included in a description of SPTLC1-related juvenile ALS by Johnson et al [2021]. The described syndrome was caused by toxic sphingolipids and sensory involvement was demonstrated; thus, it was most likely a severe early-onset form of HSN.
Nomenclature
The term "hereditary sensory neuropathy" (HSN) was first used by Hicks [1922] to describe a family with associated spontaneous shooting pains and deafness. The family was later reported as having a form of peroneal muscular atrophy.
Motor involvement was also noted in other families in southern England and described by Ellison in his University of Edinburgh MD thesis, and later by Campbell & Hoffman [1964]. The Australian families with an SPTLC1 pathogenic variant described by Dawkins et al [2001] have no visceral autonomic signs or symptoms and share a common ancestor with the southern English families described by Ellison and reported by Campbell & Hoffman [1964] as having HSN. Therefore, the term "HSN" was used in the review by Thomas [1993], and the disorder is also listed in OMIM as HSN1A. Although individuals with HSN1 rarely have visceral autonomic signs, this disorder is still classified as a hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN1A).
Even so, the terms "HSN" and "HSAN" are not ideal, as the disorder is both a sensory and a motor neuropathy. Therefore, strictly, it is a form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy. The phenotype is that of a slowly progressive length-dependent adult-onset axonal form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy (CMT type II, and hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy, HMSN II) but with prominent loss of pain fibers.
The term "HSN1" designates dominantly inherited forms of hereditary sensory neuropathy. HSAN types 2 to 6 are recessively inherited forms of sensory and autonomic neuropathies.
Prevalence
HSN affects 25 of 600 families (4.2%) with CMT studied by the author. Of these families with HSN, 25% have SPTLC1-related HSN (1% of all families with CMT).
If the overall incidence of motor and sensory neuropathies is 30:100,000, the prevalence of HSN is on the order of 2:1,000,000. HSN1A may be underestimated because diagnosis previously depended erroneously on finding pure sensory involvement, shooting pains, and/or skin damage or ulcers.