Trends in phenotype in the English paediatric neurofibromatosis type 2 cohort stratified by genetic severity.
Dorothy HallidayBeatrice EmmanouilGrace VassalloKarine LascellesJames NicholsonSaleel ChandratreGeetha AnandMartin WasikPieter PretoriusD Gareth EvansAllyson Parrynull nullPublished in: Clinical genetics (2019)
Childhood onset neurofibromatosis type 2 can be severe and genotype dependent. We present a retrospective phenotypic analysis of all ascertained children in England <age 18 (N = 87; male 61%). Mean age at last review was 13.9 years with mean follow-up 6.5 years. Patients were stratified using a validated score (1A/1B:no NF2 pathogenic_variant in blood; 2A/2B:mild/moderate NF2 constitutional or mosaic pathogenic_variant in blood; 3: constitutional truncating exon 2-13 pathogenic_variant. A total of 91% patients had a constitutional NF2 pathogenic_variant (44% de novo). Mean age at first manifestation was 4.3 and 8.8 years in groups 3 and 2A, respectively. Bilateral vestibular schwannoma, intracranial meningioma and spinal schwannoma occurred in 77%, 52% and 65% of group 3 patients, respectively, and 58%, 26% and 33% in 2A. A total of 43% group 3 and 18% 2A had severe unilateral visual loss (logmar >1.0). Focal cortical dysplasia occurred in 26% group 3 and 4% 2A. A total of 48% of group 3 underwent ≥1 major intervention (intracranial/spinal surgery/Bevacizumab/radiotherapy) compared to 35% of 2A; with 23% group 3 undergoing spinal surgery (schwannoma/ependymoma/meningioma resection) compared to 4% of 2A. Mean age starting Bevacizumab was 12.7 in group 3 and 14.9 years in 2A. In conclusion, group 3 phenotype manifests earlier with greater tumour load, poorer visual outcomes and more intervention.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- signaling pathway
- minimally invasive
- oxidative stress
- early stage
- type diabetes
- young adults
- peritoneal dialysis
- emergency department
- coronary artery disease
- radiation therapy
- spinal cord injury
- radiation induced
- gene expression
- patient reported outcomes
- high intensity
- early onset
- optical coherence tomography
- weight loss
- acute coronary syndrome
- copy number
- rectal cancer
- glycemic control