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The clinical, histologic, and genotypic spectrum of

Authors :
Rocio N, Villar-Quiles
Maja, von der Hagen
Corinne, Métay
Victoria, Gonzalez
Sandra, Donkervoort
Enrico, Bertini
Claudia, Castiglioni
Denys, Chaigne
Jaume, Colomer
Maria Luz, Cuadrado
Marianne, de Visser
Isabelle, Desguerre
Bruno, Eymard
Nathalie, Goemans
Angela, Kaindl
Emmanuelle, Lagrue
Jürg, Lütschg
Edoardo, Malfatti
Michèle, Mayer
Luciano, Merlini
David, Orlikowski
Ulrike, Reuner
Mustafa A, Salih
Beate, Schlotter-Weigel
Mechthild, Stoetter
Volker, Straub
Haluk, Topaloglu
J Andoni, Urtizberea
Anneke, van der Kooi
Ekkehard, Wilichowski
Norma B, Romero
Michel, Fardeau
Carsten G, Bönnemann
Brigitte, Estournet
Pascale, Richard
Susana, Quijano-Roy
Ulrike, Schara
Ana, Ferreiro
Source :
Neurology
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To clarify the prevalence, long-term natural history, and severity determinants of SEPN1-related myopathy (SEPN1-RM), we analyzed a large international case series. METHODS: Retrospective clinical, histologic, and genetic analysis of 132 pediatric and adult patients (2–58 years) followed up for several decades. RESULTS: The clinical phenotype was marked by severe axial muscle weakness, spinal rigidity, and scoliosis (86.1%, from 8.9 ± 4 years), with relatively preserved limb strength and previously unreported ophthalmoparesis in severe cases. All patients developed respiratory failure (from 10.1±6 years), 81.7% requiring ventilation while ambulant. Histopathologically, 79 muscle biopsies showed large variability, partly determined by site of biopsy and age. Multi-minicores were the most common lesion (59.5%), often associated with mild dystrophic features and occasionally with eosinophilic inclusions. Identification of 65 SEPN1 mutations, including 32 novel ones and the first pathogenic copy number variation, unveiled exon 1 as the main mutational hotspot and revealed the first genotype–phenotype correlations, bi-allelic null mutations being significantly associated with disease severity (p = 0.017). SEPN1-RM was more severe and progressive than previously thought, leading to loss of ambulation in 10% of cases, systematic functional decline from the end of the third decade, and reduced lifespan even in mild cases. The main prognosis determinants were scoliosis/respiratory management, SEPN1 mutations, and body mass abnormalities, which correlated with disease severity. We propose a set of severity criteria, provide quantitative data for outcome identification, and establish a need for age stratification. CONCLUSION: Our results inform clinical practice, improving diagnosis and management, and represent a major breakthrough for clinical trial readiness in this not so rare disease.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X
Volume :
95
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e88560683abbf952be2edde6fc9cd071