Abstract

Background: Smith-Magenis syndrome (SMS) is a rare condition caused by microdeletion chromosome 17p11.2 via RAI1 gene mutations, causing disrupted circadian sleep-wake patterns. Characteristic behaviors include: sleep disturbance, anxiety, maladaptive habits with self-injury (biting, picking, self-hugging, page-flipping) and outbursts. Characteristic features include: craniofacial abnormalities, short stature, 2/3 toe syndactyly, scoliosis, cardiac and genitourinary defects, hypotonia, peripheral neuropathy, epilepsy, childhood-onset truncal obesity, toileting difficulties. Management of adults with SMS span multiple disciplines: otolaryngology, audiology, ophthalmology, assessments of scoliosis, seizures, familial psychosocial health, sleep and behavioral changes with each medication. Annual assessments include: fasting lipids, thyroid panel, screening urinalysis. Patients should receive standard treatment for comorbid endocrine conditions, classically: hypercholesterolemia, hypothyroidism, growth hormone deficiency.Clinical Case: 49-year-old Hispanic female with history of SMS who presented to endocrinology for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) management. Past medical history includes T2DM with peripheral neuropathy, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, intellectual disability, anxiety, recurrent genitourinary infections, sleep apnea. Physical exam is remarkable for macroglossia, truncal obesity, scoliosis, extremity excoriations evident of skin picking and xerosis, syndactyly of 2nd-3rd toes. Patient exhibited maladaptive behaviors like page-flipping, self-hugging, tantrums. Over the past 3 years, BMI remained in the obese range (>30 kg/m2) and A1c fluctuated from 7.0 to 10.6% averaging 8.8% (<5.7%). Patient is currently managed on insulin glargine, pioglitazone and liraglutide. She did not tolerate metformin due to dose-dependent diarrhea. Patient’s mother chose against SGLT2 inhibitors due to diminished genitourinary hygiene. T2DM management was complicated by patient behaviors, including nocturnal consumption of fructose-containing food and beverages, exercise intolerance, and associated caregiver fatigue.Conclusion: This case describes a patient managed for metabolic dysfunction in conjunction with a rare microdeletion disorder causing neurobehavioral disturbance with disrupted circadian sleep-wake patterns. The most difficult aspects of diabetes management included difficulty implementing lifestyle modifications to control the patient’s hyperglycemia.

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