Progressive Deafness–Dystonia Due to Serac1 Mutations: A Study of 67 Cases
Tarih
2017Yazar
Maas, Roeltje R.
Iwanicka‐Pronicka, Katarzyna
Kalkan Ucar, Sema
Alhaddad, Bader
AlSayed, Moeenaldeen
Al‐Owain, Mohammed A.
Al‐Zaidan, Hamad I.
Balasubramaniam, Shanti
Barić, Ivo
Bubshait, Dalal K.
Burlina, Alberto
Christodoulou, John
Chung, Wendy K.
Colombo, Roberto
Darin, Niklas
Freisinger, Peter
Garcia Silva, Maria Teresa
Grunewald, Stephanie
Haack, Tobias B.
van Hasselt, Peter M.
Hikmat, Omar
Hörster, Friederike
Isohanni, Pirjo
Ramzan, Khushnooda
Kovacs‐Nagy, Reka
Krumina, Zita
Martin‐Hernandez, Elena
Mayr, Johannes A.
McClean, Patricia
De Meirleir, Linda
Naess, Karin
Ngu, Lock H.
Pajdowska, Magdalena
Rahman, Shamima
Riordan, Gillian
Riley, Lisa
Roeben, Benjamin
Rutsch, Frank
Santer, Rene
Schiff, Manuel
Seders, Martine
Sequeira, Silvia
Sperl, Wolfgang
Staufner, Christian
Synofzik, Matthis
Taylor, Robert W.
Trubicka, Joanna
Tsiakas, Konstantinos
Unal, Ozlem
Wassmer, Evangeline
Wedatilake, Yehani
Wolff, Toni
Prokisch, Holger
Morava, Eva
Pronicka, Ewa
Wevers, Ron A.
de Brouwer, Arjan P.
Wortmann, Saskia B.
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Objective 3‐Methylglutaconic aciduria, dystonia–deafness, hepatopathy, encephalopathy, Leigh‐like syndrome (MEGDHEL) syndrome is caused by biallelic variants in SERAC1. Methods This multicenter study addressed the course of disease for each organ system. Metabolic, neuroradiological, and genetic findings are reported. Results Sixty‐seven individuals (39 previously unreported) from 59 families were included (age range = 5 days–33.4 years, median age = 9 years). A total of 41 different SERAC1 variants were identified, including 20 that have not been reported before. With the exception of 2 families with a milder phenotype, all affected individuals showed a strikingly homogeneous phenotype and time course. Severe, reversible neonatal liver dysfunction and hypoglycemia were seen in >40% of all cases. Starting at a median age of 6 months, muscular hypotonia (91%) was seen, followed by progressive spasticity (82%, median onset = 15 months) and dystonia (82%, 18 months). The majority of affected individuals never learned to walk (68%). Seventy‐nine percent suffered hearing loss, 58% never learned to speak, and nearly all had significant intellectual disability (88%). Magnetic resonance imaging features were accordingly homogenous, with bilateral basal ganglia involvement (98%); the characteristic “putaminal eye” was seen in 53%. The urinary marker 3‐methylglutaconic aciduria was present in virtually all patients (98%). Supportive treatment focused on spasticity and drooling, and was effective in the individuals treated; hearing aids or cochlear implants did not improve communication skills. Interpretation MEGDHEL syndrome is a progressive deafness–dystonia syndrome with frequent and reversible neonatal liver involvement and a strikingly homogenous course of disease. Ann Neurol 2017;82:1004–1015
Bağlantı
https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.25110https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5847115/
http://hdl.handle.net/11655/15291