Clinical Description
SOST-related sclerosteosis and SOST-related endosteal hyperostosis, van Buchem type (van Buchem disease) have very similar phenotypes. However, the manifestations of van Buchem disease are generally milder than those in sclerosteosis (see Table 2). To date, more than 100 individuals have been identified with biallelic pathogenic variants in SOST or a biallelic 52-kb deletion downstream of SOST. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Clinical Features of SOST-Related Sclerosteosis
Tall stature. Accelerated linear growth becomes evident in early childhood. Longitudinal growth arrests at puberty, by which time individuals can reach heights exceeding two meters (6.5 feet).
Hearing loss is also highly prevalent, affecting 94% of individuals. It starts as conductive hearing loss in childhood, but often progresses into mixed conductive and sensorineural hearing loss later in life related to compression of the eighth cranial nerve [Hamersma et al 2003, van Lierop et al 2017].
Recurrent facial palsies are hallmark complications in SOST-related sclerosteosis, affecting 93% of individuals. The first episodes develop in early childhood and in some individuals within the first months of life. The facial palsies are caused by narrowing of the neural foramina due to bone overgrowth of the skull.
Other, less common nerve entrapment syndromes in SOST-related sclerosteosis are visual loss (2nd cranial nerve), neuralgia or anosmia (5th cranial nerve), and sensorineural hearing loss (8th cranial nerve) [van Lierop et al 2017].
Facial distortion due to severe cranial hyperostosis results in frontal bossing and mandibular overgrowth in 90% of individuals, with proptosis, hypertelorism, or midfacial hypoplasia seen in some individuals. These facial findings become apparent in early childhood and progress into adulthood [Hamersma et al 2003, van Lierop et al 2017].
Dental manifestations. Teeth can be malaligned with malocclusion due to mandibular hyperostosis.
Increased intracranial pressure can develop due to narrowing of the intracranial cavity by the thickening of calvaria. It often starts in late adolescence. In a recent study, it was reported in 71% of individuals with SOST-related sclerosteosis and was considered the cause of death in 12 of 33 deceased individuals of Afrikaner background, and six additional individuals died due to perioperative complications [van Lierop et al 2017].
Digit and nail abnormalities / syndactyly, ranging from soft-tissue webbing to bony union of the phalanges, is found at birth in 66% of individuals. It most often affects the second and third fingers, although other fingers or toes can be affected as well. More subtle deformity of the digits can also be seen, such as radial deviation of the phalanges or nail aplasia [Itin et al 2001].
Prognosis. The complications of SOST-related sclerosteosis progress into adulthood but appear to stabilize in the third decade in the majority of affected individuals [van Lierop et al 2011, van Lierop et al 2013]. Survival into old age is unusual in SOST-related sclerosteosis but not unprecedented [Barnard et al 1980, van Lierop et al 2011, van Lierop et al 2013]. Life expectancy is reduced because of sudden deaths due to herniation of the brain stem, or perioperative complications from surgery to correct increased intracranial pressure. Mean age of death is 33 years [Hamersma et al 2003], but with increasing use of early craniectomy, longer-term survival is likely. The natural history of SOST-related sclerosteosis has been reviewed in various reports, most recently in van Lierop et al [2017].
Clinical Features of Van Buchem Disease
Stature is typically normal in individuals with van Buchem disease; linear overgrowth is not typical.
Hearing loss is conductive and sensorineural with onset in childhood.
Cranial nerve entrapment syndromes due to bone overgrowth of the skull such as visual loss (2nd cranial nerve), neuralgia or anosmia (5th cranial nerve), facial palsy (7th cranial nerve), and sensorineural hearing loss (8th cranial nerve) can occur but are less common than in SOST-related sclerosteosis.
Cranial hyperostosis typically only manifests as mandibular overgrowth, which becomes apparent in young adulthood. Teeth are not typically affected.
Increased intracranial pressure is rare in individuals with van Buchem disease [van Lierop et al 2010, van Lierop et al 2013]. Sudden death due to herniation of the brain stem has never been reported in individuals with van Buchem disease.
Digit and nails typically appear normal without syndactyly. Mild distortion of tubular bones of hands and feet can be seen on radiographs.
Prognosis. Van Buchem disease also tends to stabilize in adulthood [van Lierop et al 2013]. Life expectancy in van Buchem disease appears to be normal, and reported individuals have had no significant comorbidities. The oldest individual to be studied was age 81 years with diabetes mellitus type 2, mild heart failure, and non-metastasized prostate cancer, comorbidities frequent in elderly populations [van Lierop et al 2017].
Laboratory Tests
Sclerostin. Serum concentration of sclerostin is undetectable in individuals with SOST-related sclerosteosis [van Lierop et al 2011], but low serum sclerostin concentration can be detected in individuals with van Buchem disease [van Lierop et al 2013].
Bone formation markers. Serum concentration of bone formation markers, such as procollagen type 1 amino terminal propeptide (P1NP), alkaline phosphatase, or osteocalcin, are elevated in individuals with SOST-related sclerosteosis and van Buchem disease. Levels decline with age but remain elevated above the upper limit of normal in the majority of individuals [Wergedal et al 2003, van Lierop et al 2011, van Lierop et al 2013].
Bone resorption markers. Serum concentration of the bone resorption marker type I collagen cross-linked C-terminal telopeptide (CTX) is increased in childhood, but concentration decreases with age toward the lower end of the reference range in adulthood [van Lierop et al 2011, van Lierop et al 2013]. Urinary concentration of type I collagen cross-linked N-terminal telopeptide (NTX) was elevated in six individuals with van Buchem disease [Wergedal et al 2003].
Normal findings. Serum calcium, phosphorus, and parathyroid hormone concentrations are normal [Epstein et al 1979, van Lierop et al 2011].
Bone Findings
Bone mineral density measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is greatly increased, with z scores ranging from 7.7 to 14.4 standard deviations (SD) above the mean at the spine and 7.8 to 11.5 SD above the mean at the hip in individuals with SOST-related sclerosteosis [Balemans et al 2005, Piters et al 2010, Power et al 2010, van Lierop et al 2011], and from 5.4 to 12.3 SD above the mean at the spine and 5.2 to 12.1 SD above the mean at the hip in individuals with van Buchem disease [van Lierop et al 2013].
Histologic examination of bone reveals increased bone volume and thickness of cortex and trabeculae, increased osteoblastic bone formation with normal or decreased osteoclastic bone resorption, and no abnormal mineralization of bone tissue [Stein et al 1983, Hassler et al 2014, van Lierop et al 2017].
The high bone density in SOST-related sclerosteosis is not associated with increased mineralization [Hassler et al 2014], as is seen in osteopetrosis, but there is an increased biomechanical competence of the bone and resistance to fractures [van Lierop et al 2017].
The risk for fractures, osteomyelitis, or bone marrow failure is not increased.
Nomenclature
In the 2023 revision of the Nosology of Genetic Skeletal Disorders, the SOST-related sclerosing bone dysplasias are included in the osteosclerotic disorders group, and van Buchem disease is referred to as SOST-related endosteal hyperostosis, van Buchem type [Unger et al 2023].
In the past, sclerosteosis and van Buchem disease have been grouped with other dense bone disorders under nonspecific general terms including "marble bones," "osteopetrosis," and "Albers-Schönberg disease." Diagnostic precision and syndromic delineation followed, and the term "sclerosteosis" became established. Similarly, van Buchem and his colleagues employed the designation "hyperostosis corticalis generalisata familiaris" for the condition that is now known as van Buchem disease.
Prevalence
SOST-related sclerosteosis is primarily found among the Afrikaner (Dutch ancestry) community of South Africa due to a founder variant; the carrier rate is estimated at 1:100 and prevalence at 1:60,000 [Beighton & Hamersma 1979]. However, individuals with SOST-related sclerosteosis outside the Afrikaner population have been reported [van Lierop et al 2017]. Founder variants have also been reported in individuals from Brazil and Turkey (see Table 7). With 100 individuals reported worldwide, of which 66 were from South Africa, SOST-related sclerosteosis is an extremely rare disease outside South Africa.
There have been only 31 reported individuals with van Buchem disease, of which 29 were from the Netherlands and two were from Germany [van Lierop et al 2017]. Three additional affected individuals are known to the authors [N Appelman-Dijkstra, personal observation].