Isolated sulfite oxidase deficiency (ISOD, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man [OMIM] #272300) is a rare neurometabolic autosomal recessive disorder, caused by pathogenic homozygous or compound heterozygous variants in the SUOX gene. SUOX encodes the mitochondrial enzyme sulfite oxidase, responsible for catalyzing the oxidation of sulfites to non-neurotoxic sulfates in the final step of the degradation of amino acids cysteine and methionine. The clinical presentation varies from typical severe disease with prenatal-neonatal onset to rarer, atypical, mild to moderate disease with post-neonatal onset. Among atypical presentations, the onset of symptoms from 6 months onward is defined as late-onset ISOD. Late-onset ISOD occurs in children who were mostly previously asymptomatic and is often precipitated by intercurrent illness or trivial head trauma. The most common clinical manifestation is acute encephalopathy characterized by developmental regression (transient or permanent), seizures, abnormal muscle tone and/or movement disorder. Reference Claerhout, Witters and Régal1–Reference Schwahn, van Spronsen and Misko3 However, minor signs and symptoms such as occasional unsteady gait, slight motor delay and/or hypotonia may be reported.
ISOD may be suspected in case of increased urinary S-sulfocysteine, taurine and thiosulfate, increased plasma S-sulfocysteine and taurine, decreased plasma cysteine and markedly reduced plasma homocysteine. The urinary sulfite test is often positive, while enzymatic activity in fibroblasts is absent. Concerning therapy, first-line agents are symptomatic: antiepileptic, antidystonic and muscle-relaxant drugs. An additional option is a low-protein diet without cysteine and methionine in an attempt to reduce metabolites prior to enzyme blockade and thus prevent accumulation. Reference Bindu, Nagappa, Bharath and Taly4
Here, we describe the oldest reported patient affected by late-onset ISOD due to compound heterozygosity for a novel and a known pathogenic SUOX variant.
We evaluated a 16-year-old boy due to a phenotype characterized by disruptive, impulse-control and conduct disorders associated with moderate intellectual disability. He achieved his psychomotor milestones on time and did not show neurological symptoms until 18 months of age when, after a febrile episode, he showed ataxia and subsequently a drowsy state. He was admitted to the hospital and treated for possible cerebellitis. Brain CT scan and electroencephalogram (EEG) were normal. He was discharged with the diagnosis of a “post-flu drowsy state.” After this episode, focal seizures appeared, associated with interictal mid-posterior EEG abnormalities, managed with valproic acid. At the time of our evaluation, he showed moderate intellectual disability (Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children IV: total IQ 45), stable over the subsequent years, an oppositional defiant disorder, intermittent explosive disorder with hetero-aggression and obsessive-compulsive traits. The behavioral disorder was the most debilitating aspect and required pharmacological treatment. Neurological examination revealed dysarthria with slurred speech, slight dysmetria and action tremor.
Brain MRI at 9 years showed enlarged cerebrospinal fluid spaces in the cerebellar, hemispheric and vermian regions with inferior vermis hypoplasia, slightly dilated fourth ventricle widely communicating with the cisterna magna and mild hyperintensity of the dentate nuclei (Figure 1). Neuroradiological follow-up until the age of 15 years did not reveal significant changes.
Exome sequencing showed two variants in the SUOX gene (NM_000456.2): c.1049_1052del, p.(Tyr350*) of paternal origin, never previously reported, and c.1096C>T, p.(Arg366Cys) of maternal origin. The truncating variant is expected to generate a shorter and possibly unstable protein. The missense variant affects the Moco-binding domain and could reduce the stability of the sulfite oxidase holoenzyme. Reference Claerhout, Witters and Régal1 Contrary to the observation by Misko et al., this missense variant contributed to a late-onset phenotype in our individual as well as in three other reported individuals. Reference Misko, Liang, Kohl and Eichler2,Reference Tian, Qu and Huang5 Both variants were classified as likely pathogenic according to the ACMG/AMP recommendations. Reference Richards, Aziz and Bale6 Metabolic tests detected reduced plasma homocysteine and cysteine, increased urinary sulfocysteine and positive urinary sulfite test, confirming the molecular diagnosis.
To our knowledge, only 13 individuals with late-onset ISOD have been reported in the literature so far (Supplementary Table 1). Reference Tian, Qu and Huang5,Reference Shih, Abroms and Johnson7– Reference Li, Chen, Chen and Jiang13 In our evaluation, we have excluded three individuals due to the presence of neurological symptoms prior to 6 months of life (Supplementary Table 2). Reference Garrett, Johnson, Graf, Feigenbaum and Rajagopalan14– Reference Del Rizzo, Burlina and Sass16
The average age of onset was 12 months (range 6–23 months). The presentation consisted of acute encephalopathy with psychomotor regression variably associated with behavioral abnormalities in four individuals, acute encephalopathy associated with seizures in three, isolated seizures in two, seizures associated with hyperkinetic movement disorder in two and acute hypotonia, occasional ataxia or mild motor delay in one individual each. In over half of the cases, a factor precipitating the onset was identified: intervening illness in seven and trivial trauma in two. Psychomotor development was reported normal until the onset of neurological symptoms or until a few months afterward in 71% of individuals. Muscle tone abnormalities were reported in 71% of individuals and ataxia in 43%. More than half of the individuals had a movement disorder. Fifty-seven percent presented with seizures, four exclusively at onset, while four developed epilepsy (drug-resistant in two cases). EEG was performed in almost half showing a slowed background posteriorly with focal sharp activity in one case and focal abnormalities in a second one. Aggressive behavior is persistently present in two individuals including our proband.
The majority underwent a neuroradiological examination (four CT scans and eight MRIs), and only two individuals had normal results (one CT scan and one MRI). More than half of the individuals with available neuroimaging showed signal abnormalities at the level of the basal ganglia and/or cerebellum: three had hyperintensity of the globus pallidi and the substantia nigra, two hyperintensities of the globus pallidi and the dentate nucleus of the cerebellum and one hyperintensity exclusively of the globus pallidi bilaterally. One patient had hyperintensity of the nuclei dentate with associated vermian hypoplasia. A CT scan showed vermian hypoplasia, another one hypodensity of the white matter and frontal lobe and another one temporal and cerebellar atrophy.
Plasma homocysteine was significantly lower than the normal range in all individuals tested. Hypohomocysteinemia is defined by a value <5 micromol/L. Reference Schwahn, van Spronsen and Misko3 The urinary sulfite test was carried out in almost all patients and was negative in only one. It’s known that sulfite tests can give false-negative results due to the auto-oxidation of sulfites into sulfates. Reference van der Klei-van Moorsel, Smit, Brockstedt, Jakobs, Dorche and Duran8,Reference Touati, Rusthoven and Depondt10 Six individuals undertook a low-protein diet, and in almost all, a slight biochemical and/or clinical improvement was found.
Due to the rarity of the condition and the broad spectrum of neurological symptoms, late-onset ISOD is potentially misdiagnosed with infectious diseases, intoxications or other neurometabolic/neurogenetic disorders with similar clinical manifestation and onset. Since the onset is acute, it is useful to identify a reliable, minimally invasive and inexpensive diagnostic marker such as plasma homocysteine. Furthermore, the assay of plasma homocysteine is not subject to the risk of false-negative results as the sulfite test is. However, it must be considered that some laboratories do not identify a normal range for plasma homocysteine but only a cutoff above which hyperhomocysteinemia is defined. In these cases, therefore, hypohomocysteinemia may be overlooked, along with the diagnostic suspicion of ISOD. A correct early diagnosis allows us to avoid more invasive tests, to better understand the prognosis, to start low-protein diet early and finally to carry out genetic parental counseling. In accordance with the latest guidelines relating to ISOD management, the dietary sulfur restriction provides greater benefits precisely in individuals with atypical late-onset presentation. Reference Schwahn, van Spronsen and Misko3 It is therefore necessary not to miss the diagnosis of late-onset ISOD due to the therapeutic implications and the possibility of modifying the clinical picture.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2024.360.
Data availability statement
The authors take full responsibility for the data, the analysis and the interpretation of the research, and they have full access to all of the data.
Acknowledgments
We thank the pediatric nurses from the Child Neurology and Psychiatry Unit for their cooperation.
The authors of this publication are members of the European Reference Network on Rare Congenital Malformations and Rare Intellectual Disability ERN-ITHACA (EU Framework Partnership Agreement ID: 3 HP-HP-FPA ERN-01-2016/739516).
Author contributions
Conceptualization: CAC, SR; clinical data collection and data curation: CAC, SR, CS, CD, DF, MP, SC, MP, SC, LG, AC, CF; writing – original draft preparation: CAC, SR, CD; writing – review and editing: CAC, SR, SC; supervision: CF. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding statement
The authors declare that they have nothing to report.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
Ethical standards
All investigations were carried out according to the Declaration of Helsinki.
Consent to participate
Written informed consent was collected from the parents of the patient for the inclusion of de-identified clinical data in a scientific publication, in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.