Back to Search Start Over

The clinical and genetic spectrum of inherited glycosylphosphatidylinositol deficiency disorders.

Authors :
Sidpra J
Sudhakar S
Biswas A
Massey F
Turchetti V
Lau T
Cook E
Alvi JR
Elbendary HM
Jewell JL
Riva A
Orsini A
Vignoli A
Federico Z
Rosenblum J
Schoonjans AS
de Wachter M
Delgado Alvarez I
Felipe-Rucián A
Haridy NA
Haider S
Zaman M
Banu S
Anwaar N
Rahman F
Maqbool S
Yadav R
Salpietro V
Maroofian R
Patel R
Radhakrishnan R
Prabhu SP
Lichtenbelt K
Stewart H
Murakami Y
Löbel U
D'Arco F
Wakeling E
Jones W
Hay E
Bhate S
Jacques TS
Mirsky DM
Whitehead MT
Zaki MS
Sultan T
Striano P
Jansen AC
Lequin M
de Vries LS
Severino M
Edmondson AC
Menzies L
Campeau PM
Houlden H
McTague A
Efthymiou S
Mankad K
Source :
Brain : a journal of neurology [Brain] 2024 Aug 01; Vol. 147 (8), pp. 2775-2790.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Inherited glycosylphosphatidylinositol deficiency disorders (IGDs) are a group of rare multisystem disorders arising from pathogenic variants in glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor pathway (GPI-AP) genes. Despite associating 24 of at least 31 GPI-AP genes with human neurogenetic disease, prior reports are limited to single genes without consideration of the GPI-AP as a whole and with limited natural history data. In this multinational retrospective observational study, we systematically analyse the molecular spectrum, phenotypic characteristics and natural history of 83 individuals from 75 unique families with IGDs, including 70 newly reported individuals; the largest single cohort to date. Core clinical features were developmental delay or intellectual disability (DD/ID, 90%), seizures (83%), hypotonia (72%) and motor symptoms (64%). Prognostic and biologically significant neuroimaging features included cerebral atrophy (75%), cerebellar atrophy (60%), callosal anomalies (57%) and symmetric restricted diffusion of the central tegmental tracts (60%). Sixty-one individuals had multisystem involvement including gastrointestinal (66%), cardiac (19%) and renal (14%) anomalies. Though dysmorphic features were appreciated in 82%, no single dysmorphic feature had a prevalence >30%, indicating substantial phenotypic heterogeneity. Follow-up data were available for all individuals, 15 of whom were deceased at the time of writing. Median age at seizure onset was 6 months. Individuals with variants in synthesis stage genes of the GPI-AP exhibited a significantly shorter time to seizure onset than individuals with variants in transamidase and remodelling stage genes of the GPI-AP (P = 0.046). Forty individuals had intractable epilepsy. The majority of individuals experienced delayed or absent speech (95%), motor delay with non-ambulance (64%), and severe-to-profound DD/ID (59%). Individuals with a developmental epileptic encephalopathy (51%) were at greater risk of intractable epilepsy (P = 0.003), non-ambulance (P = 0.035), ongoing enteral feeds (P < 0.001) and cortical visual impairment (P = 0.007). Serial neuroimaging showed progressive cerebral volume loss in 87.5% and progressive cerebellar atrophy in 70.8%, indicating a neurodegenerative process. Genetic analyses identified 93 unique variants (106 total), including 22 novel variants. Exploratory analyses of genotype-phenotype correlations using unsupervised hierarchical clustering identified novel genotypic predictors of clinical phenotype and long-term outcome with meaningful implications for management. In summary, we expand both the mild and severe phenotypic extremities of the IGDs, provide insights into their neurological basis, and vitally, enable meaningful genetic counselling for affected individuals and their families.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-2156
Volume :
147
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Brain : a journal of neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38456468
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awae056