SURF1 deficiency: a multi-centre natural history study

SURF1 deficiency, a monogenic mitochondrial disorder, is the most frequent cause of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficient Leigh syndrome (LS). We report the first natural history study of SURF1 deficiency. We conducted a multi-centre case notes review of 44 SURF1-deficient patients from ten different...

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Veröffentlicht in:Orphanet journal of rare diseases 2013-07, Vol.8 (1), p.96-96, Article 96
Hauptverfasser: Wedatilake, Yehani, Brown, Ruth M, McFarland, Robert, Yaplito-Lee, Joy, Morris, Andrew A M, Champion, Mike, Jardine, Phillip E, Clarke, Antonia, Thorburn, David R, Taylor, Robert W, Land, John M, Forrest, Katharine, Dobbie, Angus, Simmons, Louise, Aasheim, Erlend T, Ketteridge, David, Hanrahan, Donncha, Chakrapani, Anupam, Brown, Garry K, Rahman, Shamima
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SURF1 deficiency, a monogenic mitochondrial disorder, is the most frequent cause of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficient Leigh syndrome (LS). We report the first natural history study of SURF1 deficiency. We conducted a multi-centre case notes review of 44 SURF1-deficient patients from ten different UK centres and two Australian centres. Survival data for LRPPRC-deficient LS and nuclear-encoded complex I-deficient LS patients were obtained from previous publications. The survival of SURF1-deficient patients was compared with these two groups using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and logrank test. The majority of patients (32/44, 73%) presented in infancy (median 9.5 months). Frequent symptoms were poor weight gain (95%, median age 10 months), hypotonia (93%, median age 14 months), poor feeding/vomiting (89%, median age 10 months), developmental delay (88%, median age 14 months), developmental regression (71%, median age 19 months), movement disorder (52%, median age 24 months), oculomotor involvement (52%, median age 29 months) and central respiratory failure (78%, median age 31 months). Hypertrichosis (41%), optic atrophy (23%), encephalopathy (20%), seizures (14%) and cardiomyopathy (2%) were observed less frequently. SURF1-deficient patients have a homogeneous clinical and biochemical phenotype. Early recognition is essential to expedite diagnosis and enable prenatal diagnosis.
ISSN:1750-1172
1750-1172
DOI:10.1186/1750-1172-8-96