Carey, Guillaume, Kuchcinski, Gregory, Gauvrit, Fanny, Defebvre, Luc, Nguyen, Sylvie, Dhaenens, Claire-Marie, Dessein, Anne Frédérique, Vianey-Saban, Christine, Acquaviva, Cécile, and Tard, Céline
• BVVLs is a rare autosomal recessive neurological disorder. • Suspected with a polyradiculoneuropathy with deafness,cranial nerves impairment. • And MRI abnormalities: hypersignal of roots and cranial nerves and cauda equina. • A riboflavin supplementation could improve the symptoms. Brown-Vialetto-Van Laere syndrome is a rare, autosomal, recessive neurological condition caused by variants in the riboflavin transporter genes SLC52A2 and SLC52A3. Here, we report on three cases. Case 1 was a 35-year-old woman from a consanguineous family who presented with progressive deafness, subacute multiple cranial nerve impairments (III, VII, IX, XII), and MRI abnormalities (including as hypersignal from the cranial nerves). The patient was homozygous for a novel SLC52A3 variant. Case 2 was the woman's brother, who presented similar symptoms. Case 3 was an 18-year-old woman experiencing progressive hearing loss, bilateral steppage gait and a cranial nerves impairment (VII and XII). MRI revealed hypersignal in the root nerves and cauda equina. A novel heterozygous variant in SLC52A3 was identified. A subacute history of polyradiculoneuropathy along with progressive deafness, cranial nerve impairment, and MRI abnormalities should raise suspicion for Brown-Vialetto-Van Laere syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]