Neuromyopathy with congenital cataracts and glaucoma: a distinct syndrome caused by POLG variants.
Claudia CastiglioniFabiana FattoriBjarne UddMaria de Los Angeles AvariaBernardita SuarezAdele D'AmicoAlessandro MalandriniRosalba CarrozzoDaniela VerrigniEnrico Silvio BertiniGiorgio TascaPublished in: European journal of human genetics : EJHG (2018)
We identified three non-related patients manifesting a childhood-onset progressive neuromyopathy with congenital cataracts, delayed walking, distal weakness and wasting, glaucoma and swallowing difficulties. Electrophysiology and nerve biopsies showed a mixed axonal and demyelinating neuropathy, while muscle biopsy disclosed both neurogenic and myopathic changes with ragged red fibers, and muscle MRI showed consistent features across patients, with a peculiar concentric disto-proximal gradient of fatty replacement. We used targeted next generation sequencing and candidate gene approach to study these families. Compound biallelic heterozygous variants, p.[(Pro648Arg)]; [(His932Tyr)] and p.[(Thr251Ile),(Pro587Leu)]; [(Arg943Cys)], were found in the three patients causing this homogeneous phenotype. Our report on a subset of unrelated patients, that showed a distinct autosomal recessive childhood-onset neuromyopathy with congenital cataracts and glaucoma, expands the clinical spectrum of POLG-related disorders. It also confirms the association between cataracts and neuropathy with variants in POLG. Early onset cataract is otherwise rare in POLG-related disorders and so far reported only in a few patients with the clinical pattern of distal myopathy or neuromyopathy.
Keyphrases
- early onset
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- copy number
- spinal cord injury
- multiple sclerosis
- prognostic factors
- late onset
- patient reported outcomes
- skeletal muscle
- drug delivery
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance
- transcription factor
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- young adults
- computed tomography
- optical coherence tomography