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Cognitive Decline and Other Late-Stage Neurologic Complications in Cockayne Syndrome.

Geetanjali RajamaniSeth A StafkiAudrey L DaughertyWilliam G MantyhHannah R LittelChristine C BruelsChristina A PacakPaul D RobbinsLaura J NiedernhoferAdesoji AbionaPaola GiuntiShehla MohammedVincent LaugelPeter B Kang
Published in: Neurology. Clinical practice (2024)
Symptoms of neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric decline are nearly universal in our cohort of adults with CS, suggesting that these individuals are at risk of developing neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric decline, with symptoms related to but not specific to dementia. Considering the prominent role of DNA repair defects in CS disease mechanisms and emerging evidence for increased DNA damage in neurodegenerative disease, impaired genome maintenance may be a shared pathway underlying multiple forms of neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric decline. Components of the DNA damage response mechanism may bear further study as potential therapeutic targets that could alleviate neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric symptoms in CS and other neurodegenerative disorders.
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