Abstract
Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis type VI; MPS VI) is a chronic illness that causes progressive enlargement, inflammation, or scarring of several tissues and organs until their collapse. In most cases, an infant with MPS VI shows no symptoms. The early signs and symptoms of MPS VI in children often develop in the first few months of life. MPS VI affects various systems in the body, including the skeletal, cardiac, and respiratory systems. The authors aim in our study to describe the clinical and genotypic-phenotypic findings of MPS VI patients in 'children Welfare Teaching Hospital, Medical City Complex.' The single-center study was conducted at the 'children Welfare Teaching Hospital, Medical City Complex' from November 2016 to May 2022. The research recruited 72 MPS VI patients from Iraq, all under 20. The authors investigated the sociodemographic characteristics, hematological lab results, gene-phenotype findings, and clinical features and evaluated the severity and progression of the MPS 6 disease. Seventy-two Iraqi MPS VI patients were involved in the study, and the average age of the study sample was 6.38±3.4 (0.3-19). The consanguinity rate was 94.4%. In the research, females comprised 56.9% of the patients, and the Z-scores for body mass index and occipital-frontal head circumference were -2.66 and 1.2. The fascial features at diagnosis, 'coarse facies' (90.3%), dysostosis multiplex (93%), short stature (94.4%), and recurrent respiratory infections (91.6%), were the most common clinical features among the enrolled patients. The most frequent mutation was (complementary DNA: c.753C>G, protein effect: p.(Tyr2*) or p.(Tyr251Term), and the codon cross-tabulation: premature stop codon, or homozygous stop nonsense mutation/exon N.3) (33/69 (47.82%)). Furthermore, a statistically significant correlation existed between lower weight and height readings and the progressed and severe stages of the MPS VI illness. As the first research in Iraq with a sufficient sample size of MPS VI patients, the investigation presented important clinical and gene-phenotype findings and revealed the necessity for enhancing the diagnosis of MPS VI, including the updated molecular analysis and monitoring the multisystem parameters, aberrant comorbidities, and the progression and severity.
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