Quantifying behaviors of children with Sanfilippo syndrome: The Sanfilippo Behavior Rating Scale

Title

Quantifying behaviors of children with Sanfilippo syndrome: The Sanfilippo Behavior Rating Scale

Creator

Shapiro E G; Nestrasil I; Ahmed A; Wey A; Rudser K R; Delaney K A; Rumsey R K; Haslett P A J; Whitley C B; Potegal M

Publisher

Molecular Genetics and Metabolism

Date

2015

Subject

Medicine; amygdala volume; autism; Behavior phenotype; Behavior rating scale; Endocrinology & Metabolism; Genetics & Heredity; kluver; management; mucopolysaccharidosis type iiia; MPSIII; Research & Experimental; Sanfilippo Syndrome; behavioral problems; trajectory; characteristics

Description

The Sanfilippo Behavior Rating Scale (SBRS), a 68 item questionnaire, has been developed to assess the behavioral phenotype of children with Sanfilippo syndrome and its progression overtime. Fifteen scales rate orality, movement/activity, attention/self-control, emotional function including anger and fear, and social interaction. Items within scales intercorrelate; measures of internal consistency are adequate. Twelve scales are grouped into 4 abnormality clusters: Movement, Lack of fear, Social/emotional and Executive Dysfunction. A Loess age-trajectory analysis showed that Lack of Fear, Social/Emotional and Executive Dysfunction increased steadily with age; Orality and Mood/Anger/Aggression leveled off. Movement peaked around 6 years, then declined as children's excessive/purposeless actions stopped. Compared with standard scales, SBRS Movement was appropriately associated with the Vineland Motor scale; SBRS Lack of Fear had significant associations with the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS), indicating a symptom overlap between Sanfilippo syndrome and autism. This suggests that reduced fearfulness may be the most salient/sensitive SBRS marker of disease progression. Volumetric MRI showed that increased Lack of Fear was significantly associated with reduced amygdala volume, consistent with our hypothesis that the behavior seen in Sanfilippo syndrome is a variant of Kluver-Bucy syndrome. Hippocampal volume loss had twice the effect on Social-Emotional Dysfunction as amygdala loss, consistent with a hippocampal role in attachment and social emotions. In conclusion, the SBRS assesses the Sanfilippo behavioral phenotype; it can measure behavior change that accompanies disease progression and/or results from treatment (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation

Shapiro E G; Nestrasil I; Ahmed A; Wey A; Rudser K R; Delaney K A; Rumsey R K; Haslett P A J; Whitley C B; Potegal M, “Quantifying behaviors of children with Sanfilippo syndrome: The Sanfilippo Behavior Rating Scale,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 27, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/16807.