Back to Search Start Over

Genotype and phenotype characterization in a large dystrophinopathic cohort with extended follow-up

Authors :
Silvana Tedeschi
Alessandra Govoni
Monica Sciacco
Andreina Bordoni
Yvan Torrente
Patrizia Ciscato
Francesca Magri
S. Ghezzi
Nereo Bresolin
Sara Bonato
Domenico A. Coviello
Maria Grazia D'Angelo
Valeria Lucchini
Anna Carla Turconi
Giacomo P. Comi
Gandossini Sandra
Maurizio Moggio
Roberto Del Bo
Stefania Corti
Francesco Fortunato
Costanza Lamperti
Source :
Journal of Neurology. 258:1610-1623
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD and BMD, respectively) are allelic disorders with different clinical presentations and severity determined by mutations in the gene DMD, which encodes the sarcolemmal protein dystrophin. Diagnosis is based on clinical aspects and muscle protein analysis, followed by molecular confirmation. We revised the main aspects of the natural history of dystrophinopathies to define genotype-phenotype correlations in large patient cohorts with extended follow-up. We also specifically explored subjects carrying nucleotide substitutions in the DMD gene, a comparatively less investigated DMD/BMD subgroup. We studied 320 dystrophinopathic patients (205 DMD and 115 BMD), defining muscular, cardiac, respiratory, and cognitive involvement. We also subdivided patients according to the kind of molecular defect (deletions, duplications, nucleotide substitutions or other microrearrangements) and the mutation sites (proximal/distal to exon 45), studying phenotype-genotype correlations for each group. In DMD, mutation type did not influence clinical evolution; mutations located in distal regions (irrespective of their nature) are more likely to be associated with lower IQ levels (p = 0.005). BMD carrying proximal deletions showed a higher degree of cardiac impairment than BMD with distal deletions (p = 0.0046). In the BMD population, there was a strong correlation between the entity of muscle dystrophin deficiency and clinical course (p = 0.002). An accurate knowledge of natural history may help in the clinical management of patients. Furthermore, several clinical trials are ongoing or are currently planned, some of which aim to target specific DMD mutations: a robust natural history is therefore essential to correctly design these experimental trials.

Details

ISSN :
14321459 and 03405354
Volume :
258
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ac609b317b23cde0818b816e611b062c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-011-5979-z