Back to Search Start Over

Clinical profile of fatal familial insomnia: phenotypic variation in 129 polymorphisms and geographical regions

Authors :
Min Chu
Yue Cui
Liyong Wu
Jiali Meng
Zhuyi Jiang
Junjie Li
Hong Ye
Yang-Mingyue Ji
Wang Xin
Li Liu
Dong-Xin Wang
Jing Zhang
Haihan Yan
Lin Wang
Tian-Xinyu Xia
Kexin Xie
ZiChen Tian
Ye Zhao
Source :
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 93:291-297
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ, 2021.

Abstract

ObjectiveElucidate the core clinical and genetic characteristics and identify the phenotypic variation between different regions and genotypes of fatal familial insomnia (FFI).MethodsA worldwide large sample of FFI patients from our case series and literature review diagnosed by genetic testing were collected. The prevalence of clinical symptoms and genetic profile were obtained, and then the phenotypic comparison between Asians versus non-Asians and 129Met/Met versus 129Met/Val were conducted.ResultsIn total, 131 cases were identified. The age of onset was 47.51±12.53 (range 17–76) years, 106 patients died and disease duration was 13.20±9.04 (range 2–48) months. Insomnia (87.0%) and rapidly progressive dementia (RPD; 83.2%) occurred with the highest frequency. Hypertension (33.6%) was considered to be an objective indicator of autonomic dysfunction. Genotype frequency at codon 129 was Met/Met (84.7%) and Met/Val (15.3%), and allele frequency was Met (92.4%) and Val (7.6%).129 Met was a risk factor (OR: 3.728, 95% CI: 2.194 to 6.333, p=0.000) for FFI in the non-Asian population. Comparison of Asians and non-Asians revealed clinical symptoms and genetic background to show some differences (pConclusionsInsomnia, RPD and hypertension are representative key clinical presentations of FFI. Phenotypic variations in genotypes and geographic regions were documented. Prion protein gene 129 Met was considered to be a risk factor for FFI in the non-Asian population, and 129 polymorphisms could modify survival duration.

Details

ISSN :
1468330X and 00223050
Volume :
93
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c7a9966a8cc8cf07862cd52fd3ef1bd7