Biallelic hypomorphic variants in CAD cause uridine-responsive macrocytic anaemia with elevated haemoglobin-A2.
Orna Steinberg-ShemerJoanne YacobovichSharon Noy-LotanOrly DganyTanya KrasnovAssaf Arie BargYuval E LandauKatya KnellerRaz SomechOded GiladDafna Brik SimonNaama OrensteinShai IzraeliFrancisco Del Caño-OchoaHannah TamarySantiago Ramón-MaiquesPublished in: British journal of haematology (2023)
Biallelic pathogenic variants in CAD, that encode the multienzymatic protein required for de-novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, cause early infantile epileptic encephalopathy-50. This rare disease, characterized by developmental delay, intractable seizures and anaemia, is amenable to treatment with uridine. We present a patient with macrocytic anaemia, elevated haemoglobin-A2 levels, anisocytosis, poikilocytosis and target cells in the blood smear, and mild developmental delay. A next-generation sequencing panel revealed biallelic variants in CAD. Functional studies did not support complete abrogation of protein function; however, the patient responded to uridine supplement. We conclude that biallelic hypomorphic CAD variants may cause a primarily haematological phenotype.