Clinical Description
Muenke syndrome is characterized by coronal synostosis, and occasionally synostosis of other sutures, abnormal skull shape in those with synostosis, characteristic facies, hearing loss, and strabismus. Additional features can include developmental delay, intellectual disability, epilepsy, intracranial anomalies, brachydactyly, broad thumbs and great toes, and/or clinodactyly. Penetrance is incomplete, and phenotypic variability is considerable even within the same family. Some individuals have minor clinical signs such as macrocephaly and subtle facial findings without craniosynostosis; some have only radiographic features [Muenke et al 1997]. To date, more than 100 individuals have been identified with a p.Pro250Arg pathogenic variant in FGFR3 [Kruszka et al 2016]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Table 2.
Muenke Syndrome: Frequency of Select Features
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Feature | % of Persons w/Feature | Comment |
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Coronal synostosis | ~85% | |
Synostosis of other sutures | ~3 | |
Hearing loss | >70% | |
Developmental delay | >60% | |
Intellectual disability | >40% | |
Behavioral issues | ~50% | |
Ocular anomalies | >60% | Strabismus in 39%-66% |
Limb findings | ~50% | |
Craniosynostosis and craniofacial features. Coronal synostosis may be bilateral (~2/3 of affected individuals) or unilateral (~1/3 of affected individuals) [Keller et al 2007, Kruszka et al 2016]. Occasionally, other sutures may be involved, including the metopic suture (leading to trigonocephaly), the sagittal suture, the squamosal suture, or – rarely – all sutures (pan synostosis) [van der Meulen et al 2006, Doumit et al 2014, Kruszka et al 2016]. Craniosynostosis is not always present; approximately 12%-15% of individuals heterozygous for the FGFR3
p.Pro250Arg pathogenic variant had no evidence of craniosynostosis [Renier et al 2000, Kruszka et al 2016].
Bilateral coronal synostosis typically results in brachycephaly, although turribrachycephaly (a "tower-shaped" skull) or a cloverleaf skull can be observed. Unilateral coronal synostosis results in anterior plagiocephaly (asymmetry of the skull and face).
Other craniofacial findings typically include temporal bossing, widely spaced eyes, ptosis or proptosis (usually mild), and midface retrusion (usually mild). Rarer craniofacial features include malar flattening, a short nose with anteverted nares and a depressed nasal bridge, deviation of the nasal septum, an overhanging nasal tip, high-arched palate, cleft lip and/or palate, dental malocclusion, mild retrognathia, hypoplastic auricles, and low-set ears.
Hearing loss. In a large international cohort, more than 70% of individuals with Muenke syndrome had hearing loss, with a majority of individuals with hearing loss having bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (70.8%) and the remainder having conductive (22%) and mixed forms of hearing loss (8.6%). There is evidence that sensorineural hearing loss (usually mild and mid-to-low frequency) is specific to Muenke syndrome compared to other FGFR-related craniosynostosis syndromes [Agochukwu et al 2014a], sometimes occurring in individuals with Muenke syndrome who do not have craniosynostosis [Hollway et al 1998].
Children with Muenke syndrome and craniosynostosis can develop hearing loss following a normal newborn hearing screen [E Doherty & M Muenke, personal observation]. Individuals may have recurrent episodes of otitis media treated with myringotomy tube placement [Didolkar et al 2009, Kruszka et al 2016], which may explain the occurrence of conductive hearing loss in some individuals. Additionally, some individuals may have progressive hearing loss.
Developmental delay and behavioral issues. In a large international study, 40.8% of individuals with Muenke syndrome were reported to have intellectual disability and 66.3% had developmental delay, with speech delay the most common type of developmental delay (61.1%) [Kruszka et al 2016]. Developmental delay and/or intellectual disability is usually mild. Individuals with Muenke syndrome were more likely to be intellectually impaired than individuals with Crouzon syndrome [Flapper et al 2009] and had slightly lower IQ than other individuals with craniosynostosis without the FGFR3
p.Pro250Arg pathogenic variant [Arnaud et al 2002].
Compared to normative populations, individuals with Muenke syndrome have also been reported to be at increased risk for developing some behavioral and emotional issues [Maliepaard et al 2014]. Bannink et al [2011] found behavioral issues to be more common in boys with Muenke syndrome, with a prevalence of 50%. Approximately 24% of individuals with Muenke syndrome had a diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [Kruszka et al 2016].
Individuals with Muenke syndrome were at increased risk for developing adaptive and executive functioning issues [Yarnell et al 2015]. Interestingly, the change in behavior in the affected cohort was not dependent on the presence or absence of craniosynostosis or hearing loss, raising the question of an intrinsic brain effect of the FGFR3
p.Pro250Arg pathogenic variant that is distinct from the change in skull shape.
Neurologic abnormalities. Differences in patterns of the expression, formation, and structure of the central nervous system may be partly responsible for the developmental delay and intellectual disability observed in Muenke syndrome.
Ocular anomalies
Strabismus is the most common ocular finding in Muenke syndrome. Children with Muenke syndrome also have a higher incidence of anisometropia, downward lateral canthal dystopia, and amblyopia [
Jadico et al 2006].
Limb findings. Most individuals with Muenke syndrome have normal-appearing hands and feet with normal range of motion of all joints; many of the limb findings in Muenke syndrome are identified on radiographs, including short, broad middle phalanges of the fingers, absent or hypoplastic middle phalanges of the toes, carpal and/or tarsal fusion, and cone-shaped epiphyses [Hughes et al 2001, Kruszka et al 2016]. Broad thumbs and great toes have also been described in individuals with Muenke syndrome. Cutaneous syndactyly has been described in 13 affected individuals [Golla et al 1997, Passos-Bueno et al 1999, Chun et al 2002, Trusen et al 2003, Shah et al 2006, Baynam & Goldblatt 2010, de Jong et al 2011].
Obstructive sleep apnea, a common finding in craniosynostosis syndromes in general, is less prevalent in those with Muenke syndrome [Bannink et al 2011, Dentino et al 2015].