Patients with cervical or mediastinal Hodgkin disease (HD) classically underwent chemotherapy plus extended-field radiation therapy. We report six patients who gradually developed severe atrophy and ...weakness of cervical paraspinal and shoulder girdle muscles 5-30 years after mantle irradiation for HD. Although clinical presentation was uniform, including a dropped head syndrome, electrophysiological and pathological findings were rather heterogeneous. Either neurogenic or myogenic processes may be involved and sometimes combined. We discuss the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying these cervicoscapular motor complications of mantle irradiation in HD.
Neuropathies associated with lymphoma (NAL) are rare and present a great clinical heterogeneity, making them difficult to diagnose and worsening their prognosis.
(1) To report the different patterns ...of NAL and discuss the mechanisms encountered; (2) to determine the relationship between a given type of lymphoma and a specific type of neuropathy; and (3) to assess the prognosis of NAL.
Among 150 patients with lymphoma and neuropathy, we selected 26 in whom the neuropathy was not related to drug induced or IgM-antimyelin associated glycoprotein neuropathies. The pattern of neuropathy was defined in terms of its clinical and electrophysiological features. Neurological improvement, haematological remission and occurrence of death were taken into account to determine the prognosis.
13 patients (50%) had a demyelinating polyneuropathy (PNP), seven (27%) had a radiculopathy linked to proximal root tumoral infiltration and six (23%) had an axonal multiple mononeuropathy (MM) related to distal lymphomatous infiltration or to paraneoplastic microvasculitis. Hodgkin's lymphoma was only associated with demyelinating PNP. High grade B cell lymphoma was strongly associated with radiculopathy. Neurological improvement was observed in 69% of patients with demyelinating PNP, 29% with radiculopathy and 50% with MM. Haematological remission was observed in 46% of patients with demyelinating PNP, 29% with radiculopathy and 83% with MM.
Demyelinating PNP, the most frequently observed neuropathy in this study, had the best neurological prognosis. Chemotherapy combined with immune mediated treatment was the most effective treatment in this group. Identifying the type and mechanism of NAL is crucial in order to define the therapeutic strategy and improve the prognosis.
Abstract Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease caused by antibodies targeting the neuromuscular junction of skeletal muscles. Triple-seronegative MG (tSN-MG, without detectable AChR, MuSK ...and LRP4 antibodies), which accounts for ~ 10% of MG patients, presents a serious gap in MG diagnosis and complicates differential diagnosis of similar disorders. Several AChR antibody positive patients (AChR-MG) also have antibodies against titin, usually detected by ELISA. We have developed a very sensitive radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) for titin antibodies, by which many previously negative samples were found positive, including several from tSN-MG patients. The validity of the RIPA results was confirmed by western blots. Using this RIPA we screened 667 MG sera from 13 countries; as expected, AChR-MG patients had the highest frequency of titin antibodies (40.9%), while MuSK-MG and LRP4-MG patients were positive in 14.6% and 16.4% respectively. Most importantly, 13.4% (50/372) of the tSN-MG patients were also titin antibody positive. None of the 121 healthy controls or the 90 myopathy patients, and only 3.6% (7/193) of other neurological disease patients were positive. We thus propose that the present titin antibody RIPA is a useful tool for serological MG diagnosis of tSN patients.
Objectives
Rhabdomyolysis and myalgia are common conditions, and mutation in the ryanodine receptor 1 gene (RYR1) is suggested to be a common cause. Due to the large size of RYR1, however, sequencing ...has not been widely accessible before the recent advent of next‐generation sequencing technology and limited phenotypic descriptions are therefore available.
Material & Methods
We present the medical history, clinical and ancillary findings of patients with RYR1 mutations and rhabdomyolysis and myalgia identified in Denmark, France and The Netherlands.
Results
Twenty‐two patients with recurrent rhabdomyolysis (CK > 10 000) or myalgia with hyperCKemia (>1.5 × ULN) and a RYR1 mutation were identified. One had mild wasting of the quadriceps muscle, but none had fixed weakness. Symptoms varied from being restricted to intense exercise to limiting ADL function. One patient developed transient kidney failure during rhabdomyolysis. Two received immunosuppressants on suspicion of myositis. None had episodes of malignant hyperthermia. Muscle biopsies were normal, but CT/MRI showed muscle hypertrophy in most. Delay from first symptom to diagnosis was 12 years on average. Fifteen different dominantly inherited mutations were identified. Ten were previously described as pathogenic and 5 were novel, but rare/absent from the background population, and predicted to be pathogenic by in silico analyses. Ten of the mutations were reported to give malignant hyperthermia susceptibility.
Conclusion
Mutations in RYR1 should be considered as a significant cause of rhabdomyolysis and myalgia syndrome in patients with the characteristic combination of rhabdomyolysis, myalgia and cramps, creatine kinase elevation, no weakness and often muscle hypertrophy.
Background and purpose
To describe a large series of patients with α, β, and γ sarcoglycanopathies (LGMD‐R3, R4, and R5) and study phenotypic correlations and disease progression.
Methods
A ...multicentric retrospective study in four centers in the Paris area collecting neuromuscular, respiratory, cardiac, histologic, and genetic data. The primary outcome of progression was age of loss of ambulation (LoA); disease severity was established according to LoA before or after 18 years of age. Time‐to‐event analysis was performed.
Results
One hundred patients (54 γ‐SG; 41 α‐SG; 5 β‐SG) from 80 families were included. The γ‐SG patients had earlier disease onset than α‐SG patients (5.5 vs. 8 years; p = 0.022) and β‐SG patients (24.4 years). Axial muscle weakness and joint contractures were frequent and exercise intolerance was observed. At mean follow‐up of 22.9 years, 65.3% of patients were wheelchair‐bound (66.7% α‐SG, 67.3% γ‐SG, 40% β‐SG). Dilated cardiomyopathy occurred in all sarcoglycanopathy subtypes, especially in γ‐SG patients (p = 0.01). Thirty patients were ventilated and six died. Absent sarcoglycan protein expression on muscle biopsy and younger age at onset were associated with earlier time to LoA (p = 0.021 and p = 0.002). Age at onset was an independent predictor of both severity and time to LoA (p = 0.0004 and p = 0.009). The α‐SG patients showed genetic heterogeneity, whereas >90% of γ‐SG patients carried the homozygous c.525delT frameshift variant. Five new mutations were identified.
Conclusions
This large multicentric series delineates the clinical spectrum of patients with sarcoglycanopathies. Age at disease onset is an independent predictor of severity of disease and LoA, and should be taken into account in future clinical trials.
This large multicentric Parisian series delineates the clinical spectrum of patients with sarcoglycanopathies. Age at disease onset and absence of sarcoglycan expression on muscle biopsy are predictors of severity of disease and loss of ambulation, and should be taken into account in future clinical trials.
Carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2) deficiency is a rare mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (FAO) disorder characterized by myalgia, exercise intolerance, and rhabdomyolysis. We evaluate the ...efficacy of bezafibrate (BZ), a hypolipidemic drug, as a treatment for this form of CPT2 deficiency. A pilot trial was conducted with BZ in six patients for 6 months. There was a follow‐up period of 3 years. The oxidation rates of the long‐chain fatty acid derivative palmitoyl‐CoA, measured in the mitochondria of the patients' muscles, were markedly lower than normal before treatment and increased significantly (+39 to +206% P = 0.028) in all patients after BZ treatment. The evaluation of the therapeutic effects by the patients themselves (using the Short Form Health Survey (SF‐36)), as well as by the physicians, indicated an improvement in the condition of the patients; there was an increase in physical activity and a decline in muscular pain. The results suggest that BZ has a therapeutic effect in the muscular form of CPT2 deficiency.
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (2010) 88 1, 101–108. doi: 10.1038/clpt.2010.55
Abstract Seronegative myasthenia gravis (MG) presents a serious gap in MG diagnosis and understanding. We applied a cell based assay (CBA) for the detection of muscle specific kinase (MuSK) ...antibodies undetectable by radioimmunoassay. We tested 633 triple-seronegative MG patients' sera from 13 countries, detecting 13% as positive. MuSK antibodies were found, at significantly lower frequencies, in 1.9% of healthy controls and 5.1% of other neuroimmune disease patients, including multiple sclerosis and neuromyelitis optica. The clinical data of the newly diagnosed MuSK-MG patients are presented. 27% of ocular seronegative patients were MuSK antibody positive. Moreover, 23% had thymic hyperplasia suggesting that thymic abnormalities are more common than believed.
Mutations in one of the 3 genes encoding collagen VI (COLVI) are responsible for a group of heterogeneous phenotypes of which Bethlem myopathy (BM) represents the milder end of the spectrum. ...Genotype-phenotype correlations and long-term follow-up description in BM remain scarce.
We retrospectively evaluated the long-term clinical evolution, and genotype-phenotype correlations in 35 genetically identified BM patients (23 index cases).
Nineteen patients showed a typical clinical picture with contractures, proximal weakness and slow disease progression while 11 presented a more severe evolution. Five patients showed an atypical presentation, namely a limb girdle muscle weakness in 2 and a congenital myopathy pattern with either no contractures, or only limited to ankles, in 3 of them. Pathogenic COL6A1-3 mutations were mostly missense or in frame exon-skipping resulting in substitutions or deletions. Twenty one different mutations were identified including 12 novel ones. The mode of inheritance was, autosomal dominant in 83% of the index patients (including 17% (N=4) with a de novo mutation), recessive in 13%, and undetermined in one patient. Skipping of exon 14 of COL6A1 was found in 35% of index cases and was mostly associated with a severe clinical evolution. Missense mutations were detected in 39% of index cases and associated with milder forms of the disease.
Long-term follow-up identified important phenotypic variability in this cohort of 35 BM patients. However, worsening of the functional disability appeared typically after the age of 40 in 47% of our patients, and was frequently associated with COL6A1 exon 14 skipping.
Objective
To study scapular winging or other forms of scapular dyskinesis (condition of alteration of the normal position and motion of the scapula) in myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1), which is ...generally considered to be a distal myopathy, we performed an observational cohort study.
Methods
We performed a prospective cohort study on the clinical features and progression over time of 33 patients with DM1 and pronounced, mostly asymmetric scapular winging or other forms of scapular dyskinesis. We also explored if scapular dyskinesis in DM1 has the same genetic background as in facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy type 1 (FSHD1).
Results
The cohort included patients with congenital (
n
= 3), infantile (
n
= 6) and adult-onset DM1 (
n
= 24). Scapular girdle examination showed moderate shoulder girdle weakness (mean MRC 3) and atrophy of trapezius, infraspinatus, and rhomboid major, seemingly similar as in FSHD1. Shoulder abduction and forward flexion were limited (50–70°). In five patients, scapular dyskinesis was the initial disease symptom; in the others it appeared 1–24 years after disease onset. Follow-up data were available in 29 patients (mean 8 years) and showed mild to severe increase of scapular dyskinesis over time. In only three patients, DM1 coexisted with a FSHD mutation. In all other patients, FSHD was genetically excluded. DM2 was genetically excluded in nine patients. The clinical features of the patients with both DM1 and FSHD1 mutations were similar to those with DM1 only.
Conclusion
Scapular dyskinesis can be considered to be part of DM1 in a small proportion of patients. In spite of the clinical overlap, FSHD can explain scapular dyskinesis only in a small minority. This study is expected to improve the recognition of shoulder girdle involvement in DM1, which will contribute to the management of these patients.