Phosphomannomutase deficiency (PMM2-CDG) is the most frequent congenital disorder of glycosylation. The cerebellum is nearly always affected in PMM2-CDG patients, a cerebellar atrophy progression is ...observed, and cerebellar dysfunction is their main daily functional limitation. Different therapeutic agents are under development, and clinical evaluation of drug candidates will require a standardized score of cerebellar dysfunction. We aim to assess the validity of the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS) in children and adolescents with genetically confirmed PMM2-CDG deficiency. We compare ICARS results with the Nijmegen Pediatric CDG Rating Scale (NPCRS), neuroimaging, intelligence quotient (IQ) and molecular data.
Our observational study included 13 PMM2-CDG patients and 21 control subjects. Ethical permissions and informed consents were obtained. Three independent child neurologists rated PMM2-CDG patients and control subjects using the ICARS. A single clinician administered the NPCRS. All patients underwent brain MRI, and the relative diameter of the midsagittal vermis was measured. Psychometric evaluations were available in six patients. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare ICARS between patients and controls. To evaluate inter-observer agreement in patients' ICARS ratings, intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) were calculated. ICARS internal consistency was evaluated using Cronbach's alpha. Spearman's rank correlation coefficient test was used to correlate ICARS with NPCRS, midsagittal vermis relative diameter and IQ.
ICARS and ICARS subscores differed between patients and controls (p < 0.001). Interobserver agreement of ICARS was "almost perfect" (ICC = 0.99), with a "good" internal reliability (Cronbach's alpha = 0.72). ICARS was significantly correlated with the total NPCRS score (rs 0.90, p < 0.001). However, there was no agreement regarding categories of severity. Regarding neuroimaging, inverse correlations between ICARS and midsagittal vermis relative diameter (rs -0.85, p = 0.003) and IQ (rs -0.94, p = 0.005) were found. Patients bearing p.E93A, p.C241S or p.R162W mutations presented a milder phenotype.
ICARS is a reliable instrument for assessment of PMM2-CDG patients, without significant inter-rater variability. Despite our limited sample size, the results show a good correlation between functional cerebellar assessment, IQ and neuroimaging. For the first a correlation between ICARS, neuroimaging and IQ in PMM2-CDG patients has been demonstrated.
Objective
We aim to delineate the progression of cerebellar atrophy (the primary neuroimaging finding) in children with phosphomannomutase-deficiency (PMM2-CDG) by analyzing longitudinal MRI studies ...and performing cerebellar volumetric analysis and a 2D cerebellar measurement.
Methods
Statistical analysis was used to compare MRI measurements midsagittal vermis relative diameter (MVRD) and volume of children with PMM2-CDG and sex- and age-matched controls, and to determine the rate of progression of cerebellar atrophy at different ages.
Results
Fifty MRI studies of 33 PMM2-CDG patients were used for 2D evaluation, and 19 MRI studies were available for volumetric analysis. Results from a linear regression model showed that patients have a significantly lower MVRD and cerebellar volume compared to controls (
p
< 0.001 and
p
< 0.001 respectively). There was a significant negative correlation between age and MVRD for patients (
p
= 0.014). The rate of cerebellar atrophy measured by the loss of MVRD and cerebellar volume per year was higher at early ages (
r
= −0.578,
p
= 0.012 and
r
= −0.323,
p
= 0.48 respectively), particularly in patients under 11 years (
p
= 0.004). There was a significant positive correlation between MVRD and cerebellar volume in PMM2-CDG patients (
r
= 0.669,
p
= 0.001).
Conclusions
Our study quantifies a progression of cerebellar atrophy in PMM2-CDG patients, particularly during the first decade of life, and suggests a simple and reliable measure, the MVRD, to monitor cerebellar atrophy. Quantitative measurement of MVRD and cerebellar volume are essential for correlation with phenotype and outcome, natural follow-up, and monitoring in view of potential therapies in children with PMM2-CDG.
We aim to delineate the progression of cerebellar syndrome in children with phosphomannomutase-deficiency (PMM2-CDG) using the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS). We sought ...correlation between cerebellar volumetry and clinical situation. We prospectively evaluated PMM2-CDG patients aged from 5 to 18 years through ICARS at two different time points set apart by at least 20 months. We reviewed available MRIs and performed volumetric analysis when it was possible.
From the eligible 24, four patients were excluded due to severe mental disability (n = 2) and supratentorial lesions (n = 2). Two different ICARS evaluations separated by more than 20 months were available for 14 patients showing an improvement in the cerebellar syndrome: ICARS1: 35.71 versus ICARS2: 30.07 (p < 0.001). When we considered time, we saw an improvement of 2.64 points in the ICARS per year with an SD of 1.97 points (p < 0.001). The ICARS subscales results improved with time, reaching statistical significance in "Posture and gait" (p < 0.001), "Kinetic functions" (p = 0.04) and "Speech abnormalities" (p = 0.045). We found a negative correlation between the ICARS results and total cerebellar volume (r = -0.9, p = 0.037) in a group of five patients with available volumetric study, meaning that the higher the ICARS score, the more severe was the cerebellar atrophy.
Our study shows a stabilization or mild improvement in the cerebellar functions of paediatric PMM2-CDG patients despite cerebellar volume loss. ICARS is a valid scale to quantify the evolution of cerebellar syndrome in PMM2-CDG patients. The availability of ICARS and other reliable and sensitive follow-up tools may prove essential for the evaluation of potential therapies.
In more than two thirds of cases, glutaric aciduria type I begins in the first 3 years of life with an acute encephalopathic crisis with hypotonia or generalized rigidity, neurologic depression, ...irritability, seizures, and dystonia. The clinical histories were reviewed for 13 glutaric aciduria type I patients (9 male, 4 female; mean age, 8.7 months; range, 3-15 months) with encephalopathic crisis seen at Sant Joan de Déu Hospital, to describe the clinical features and the initial electroencephalographic (EEG) findings. Twelve of the patients (92%) had paroxysmal episodes at onset. Other clinical features included irritability (12/13), neurologic depression (11/13), and hypotonia (7/13). All patients evolved to dystonic tetraparesis. Thirty-five EEGs were recorded in the acute stage and during the first year of follow-up. Spike discharges on EEG were observed in only 2 of the 13 patients, and 8 had slow background activity. No patient developed seizures during follow-up. Seizures may be part of the symptomatology at the onset of glutaric aciduria type I, but most paroxysmal movements appear to be dystonic episodes. This hypothesis is supported by four facts: seizures do not occur after dystonic tetraparesis is noticed, EEG paroxysms are infrequent in the acute stage, antiepileptic drugs are not needed in the long term, and epilepsy is rare in the follow-up.
PLA2G6-associated neurodegeneration (PLAN) comprises a continuum of three phenotypes with overlapping clinical and radiologic features.
Observational clinical study in a cohort of infantile and ...childhood onset PLAN patients and genetic analysis of the PLA2G6 gene. We analysed chronological evolution in terms of age at onset and disease course through a 66-item questionnaire. We performed qualitative and quantitative assessment of MRI abnormalities and searched for clinical and radiological phenotype and genotype correlations.
Sixteen PLAN patients (mean age: 10.2 years, range 3–33) were evaluated, with a median onset (years) of signs/symptoms as follows: neurological regression (1.5), oculomotor abnormalities (1.5), hypotonia (1.8), gait loss (2.2), pyramidal signs (3.0), axonal neuropathy (3.0), dysphagia (4.0), optic atrophy (4.0), psychiatric symptoms (4.0), seizures (5.9), joint contractures (6.0), dystonia (8.0), bladder dysfunction (13.0) and parkinsonism (15.0). MRI assessment identified cerebellar atrophy (19/19), brain iron deposition (10/19), clava hypertrophy (8/19) and T2/FLAIR hyperintensity of the cerebellar cortex (6/19). The mid-sagittal vermis relative diameter (MVRD) correlated with age at onset of clinical variants, meaning that the earlier the onset, the more severe the cerebellar atrophy. All patients harboured missense, nonsense and frameshift mutations in PLA2G6, including four novel variants.
Cerebellar atrophy was a universal radiological sign in infantile and childhood onset PLAN, and correlated with the severity of the phenotype. Iron accumulation within the globus pallidum and substantia nigra was also a common and strikingly uniform feature regardless of the phenotype.
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•Cerebellar atrophy was a universal sign in infantile and childhood-onset PLAN.•Patients with an earlier disease onset showed a more severe cerebellar atrophy.•Low signal within globus pallidum and substantia nigra was strikingly uniform and prominent in 57% of our patients.
ABSTRACT
Warburg Micro syndrome and Martsolf syndrome (MS) are heterogeneous autosomal‐recessive developmental disorders characterized by brain, eye, and endocrine abnormalities. Causative biallelic ...germline mutations have been identified in RAB3GAP1, RAB3GAP2, or RAB18, each of which encode proteins involved in membrane trafficking. This report provides an up to date overview of all known disease variants identified in 29 previously published families and 52 new families. One‐hundred and forty‐four Micro and nine Martsolf families were investigated, identifying mutations in RAB3GAP1 in 41% of cases, mutations in RAB3GAP2 in 7% of cases, and mutations in RAB18 in 5% of cases. These are listed in Leiden Open source Variation Databases, which was created by us for all three genes. Genotype–phenotype correlations for these genes have now established that the clinical phenotypes in Micro syndrome and MS represent a phenotypic continuum related to the nature and severity of the mutations present in the disease genes, with more deleterious mutations causing Micro syndrome and milder mutations causing MS. RAB18 has not yet been linked to the RAB3 pathways, but mutations in all three genes cause an indistinguishable phenotype, making it likely that there is some overlap. There is considerable genetic heterogeneity for these disorders and further gene identification will help delineate these pathways.
Warburg Micro syndrome (OMIM 60018) and Martsolf syndrome (OMIM 21270) are related autosomal recessive neurodevelopmental disorders. Micro syndrome is more severe and characterized by ocular (microphthalmos, microcornea, congenital cataracts and optic atrophy) and neurodevelopmental pathology (microcephaly, polymicrogyria, hypogenesis of the corpus callosum, severe learning disability and progressive limb spasticity) and hypothalamic hypogonadism. Causative germline mutations have been identified in RAB3GAP1 (41% of families), RAB3GAP2 (7% of families) and RAB18 (5% of families) and result in a strikingly consistent phenotype.
To report the prevalence of creatine transporter deficiency in males with mental retardation and to study whether a protein-rich food intake might be a potential diagnostic pitfall.
We determined ...creatine/creatinine ratio in urine samples from 1600 unrelated male patients with mental retardation and/or autism. Urine creatine was analyzed by HPLC-MS/MS.
Thirty-three of 1600 cases showed increased urine creatine/creatinine ratio. Four out of these thirty-three cases were definitively diagnosed with creatine transporter deficiency, while the other 29 were false positive results. Significantly higher values were observed for urine Cr/Crn ratio in healthy volunteers after a meal based on beef or oily fish as compared to eggs, pasta or salad (Wilcoxon test:
p
<
0.005).
False positive results may be observed in biochemical screening for creatine transporter deficiency, and they may be due to intake of meals rich in creatine prior to urine samples analysis.
Abnormalities of the L1CAM gene, a member of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily of neural-cell adhesion molecules, are associated with X-linked hydrocephalus and some allelic disorders. ...Hirschsprung's disease (HSCR) is characterized by the absence of ganglion cells and the presence of hypertrophic nerve trunks in the distal bowel. There have been three reports of patients with X-linked hydrocephalus and HSCR with a mutation in the L1CAM gene. We report three more patients with similar conditions. We suspect that decreased L1CAM may be a modifying factor in the development of HSCR.
Rett syndrome (RTT) is an X-linked neurodevelopmental disease that affects girls almost exclusively. In a high proportion of patients the disease is caused by de novo mutations at the MECP2 gene, ...encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2. With the aim to characterize the spectrum of mutations in a series of sporadic RTT patients, including an affected male, and to relate the genetic results to the clinical features of the disease, a clinical checklist and a score system were elaborated to evaluate the clinical severity of the disease. Mutation analysis of the MECP2 coding region was done by direct sequencing. De novo mutations were found in 60% of the patients, including both classic and atypical forms. The change R133H was identified in a 13-year-old boy showing a classic RTT phenotype and normal karyotype. Significant differences were observed among missense and truncating mutations regarding disease severity, age of onset of stereotypies, and the ability of the patients to sit alone and to walk.