Clinical and molecular characterization of adult patients with late-onset MTHFR deficiency.
Cécilia Marelli-TosiChristian LavigneKarolina M StepienMirian C H JanssenFrancois FeilletViktor KožichPavel JesinaRebecca SchuleChristoph KesslerIsabelle Redonnet-VernhetAdeline RegnierPatricie BurdaMatthias BaumgartnerJean-Francois BenoistMartina HuemerFanny Mochelnull nullPublished in: Journal of inherited metabolic disease (2020)
5,10-Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) deficiency usually presents as a severe neonatal disease. This study aimed to characterize natural history, biological and molecular data, and response to treatment of patients with late-onset MTHFR deficiency. The patients were identified through the European Network and Registry for Homocystinuria and Methylation Defects and the Adult group of the French Society for Inherited Metabolic Diseases; data were retrospectively colleted. To identify juvenile to adult-onset forms of the disease, we included patients with a diagnosis established after the age of 10 years. We included 14 patients (median age at diagnosis: 32 years; range: 11-54). At onset (median age: 20 years; range 9-38), they presented with walking difficulties (n = 8), cognitive decline (n = 3) and/or seizures (n = 3), sometimes associated with mild mental retardation (n = 6). During the disease course, symptoms were almost exclusively neurological with cognitive dysfunction (93%), gait disorders (86%), epilepsy (71%), psychiatric symptoms (57%), polyneuropathy (43%), and visual deficit (43%). Mean diagnostic delay was 14 years. Vascular events were observed in 28% and obesity in 36% of the patients. One patient remained asymptomatic at the age of 55 years. Upon treatment, median total homocysteine decreased (from 183 μmol/L, range 69-266, to 90 μmol/L, range 20-142) and symptoms improved (n = 9) or stabilized (n = 4). Missense pathogenic variants in the C-terminal regulatory domain of the protein were over-represented compared to early-onset cases. Residual MTHFR enzymatic activity in skin fibroblasts (n = 4) was rather high (17%-58%). This series of patients with late-onset MTHFR deficiency underlines the still unmet need of a prompt diagnosis of this treatable disease.
Keyphrases
- late onset
- early onset
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- cognitive decline
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- electronic health record
- metabolic syndrome
- peritoneal dialysis
- mental health
- type diabetes
- machine learning
- dna methylation
- patient reported outcomes
- gene expression
- skeletal muscle
- physical activity
- deep learning
- blood brain barrier
- small molecule
- weight loss
- soft tissue
- childhood cancer