Clinical and mutational spectrum of Colombian patients with Pelizaeus Merzbacher Disease
Case Presentation: Pelizaeus Merzbacher Disease (PMD) is an X-linked developmental defect of myelination that causes childhood chronic spastic encephalopathy. Its genetic etiology can be either a duplication (or other gene dosage alterations) or a punctual mutation at the PLP1 locus. Clinically, it...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Colombia médica (Cali, Colombia) Colombia), 2019-12, Vol.49 (2) |
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Zusammenfassung: | Case Presentation: Pelizaeus Merzbacher Disease (PMD) is an X-linked
developmental defect of myelination that causes childhood chronic
spastic encephalopathy. Its genetic etiology can be either a
duplication (or other gene dosage alterations) or a punctual mutation
at the PLP1 locus. Clinically, it presents with developmental delay,
nystagmus and, spasticity, supported by neuroimaging in which the
defect of myelination is evident. We present a series of seven
Colombian patients diagnosed with this leucodystrophy, describing their
genotypic and phenotypic characteristics and heterogeneity. Clinical
Findings: All patients included were male, 6 months to 16 years of age.
Mean age at onset of symptoms was 8 months. Mean age at diagnosis was 5
years 5 months, being classic PMD most frequently diagnosed, as
compared to the connatal phenotype. All cases had a primary diagnosis
of developmental delay on 100%, and in 28.7% of cases, early onset
nystagmus was described. 85.7% of patients had spasticity, 71.4%
cerebellar signs, 57.0% hypotonia, and 28.5% had an abnormal movement
disorder. Only three patients were able to achieve gait, though
altered. In the two patients who had a diagnosis of connatal PMD
maturational ages in danger zones according to the WHO Abbreviated
Scale of Psychosocial Development were documented. All cases had
abnormalities in neuroimages. Molecular Analysis and Results: Molecular
studies were used in the majority of the cases to confirm the diagnosis
(85.7%). For two cases molecular confirmation was not considered
necessary given their affected male brothers had already been tested.
PLP1 gene dosage alterations (duplications) were found in 28.5% of the
patients (two siblings), whereas three different single nucleotide
variants were detected. Clinical Relevance: According to these
findings, as authors we propose the diagnostic algorithm in Colombian
population to begin on a high clinical suspicion, followed by
paraclinical extension, moving on to the molecular confirmation by
using approaches to simultaneously sequence the PLP1 gene in order to
detect point mutations and in/dels and performing a copy number
variation analysis for the detection of gene dosage alterations. |
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ISSN: | 0120-8322 |