Selenoprotein N‐related myopathy: a retrospective natural history study to guide clinical trials

Objective To describe clinical features and disease progression of Selenoprotein N‐related myopathy in a large multicenter cohort of patients. Methods Cross‐sectional multicenter data analysis of 60 patients (53 families) with Selenoprotein N‐related myopathy and single‐center retrospective longitud...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of clinical and translational neurology 2020-11, Vol.7 (11), p.2288-2296
Hauptverfasser: Silwal, Arpana, Sarkozy, Anna, Scoto, Mariacristina, Ridout, Deborah, Schmidt, Anne, Laverty, Aidan, Henriques, Matilde, D'Argenzio, Luigi, Main, Marion, Mein, Rachael, Manzur, Adnan Y, Abel, Francois, Al‐Ghamdi, Fouad, Genetti, Casie A, Ardicli, Didem, Haliloglu, Goknur, Topaloglu, Haluk, Beggs, Alan H, Muntoni, Francesco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective To describe clinical features and disease progression of Selenoprotein N‐related myopathy in a large multicenter cohort of patients. Methods Cross‐sectional multicenter data analysis of 60 patients (53 families) with Selenoprotein N‐related myopathy and single‐center retrospective longitudinal analysis of 25 patients (21 families) over a median period of 5.3 years. Results The majority of patients (46/60, 77%) presented before age 2 years with hypotonia, poor head/neck control, and developmental delay. At last assessment (median age 14 years; range 2.5 to 36 years), 10/60 patients had minimal or no ambulation. Ventilatory support was initiated in 50/60 patients at a mean Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) of 38% and at a median age of 13 years. Forty‐five/60 patients developed scoliosis (at median age 12.1 years) and 18 had scoliosis surgery at a median age of 13.6 years. Five children needed nasogastric feeds and/or gastrostomy. Longitudinal data analysis on 25 patients showed progressive decline of Hammersmith functional motor scores (estimated annual change −0.55 point), time to walk 10 meter, time standing from sitting, and from lying. Sixteen patients had weights 
ISSN:2328-9503
2328-9503
DOI:10.1002/acn3.51218