| Literature DB >> 18849289 |
John Collinge1, Jerome Whitfield, Edward McKintosh, Adam Frosh, Simon Mead, Andrew F Hill, Sebastian Brandner, Dafydd Thomas, Michael P Alpers.
Abstract
Kuru is so far the principal human epidemic prion disease. While its incidence has steadily declined since the cessation of its route of transmission, endocannibalism, in Papua New Guinea in the 1950s, the arrival of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), also thought to be transmitted by dietary prion exposure, has given kuru a new global relevance. We investigated all suspected cases of kuru from July 1996 to June 2004 and identified 11 kuru patients. There were four females and seven males, with an age range of 46-63 years at the onset of disease, in marked contrast to the age and sex distribution when kuru was first investigated 50 years ago. We obtained detailed histories of residence and exposure to mortuary feasts and performed serial neurological examination and genetic studies where possible. All patients were born a significant period before the mortuary practice of transumption ceased and their estimated incubation periods in some cases exceeded 50 years. The principal clinical features of kuru in the studied patients showed the same progressive cerebellar syndrome that had been previously described. Two patients showed marked cognitive impairment well before preterminal stages, in contrast to earlier clinical descriptions. In these patients, the mean clinical duration of 17 months was longer than the overall average in kuru but similar to that previously reported for the same age group, and this may relate to the effects of both patient age and PRNP codon 129 genotype. Importantly, no evidence for lymphoreticular colonization with prions, seen uniformly in vCJD, was observed in a patient with kuru at tonsil biopsy.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18849289 PMCID: PMC2581654 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2008.0068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8436 Impact factor: 6.237
Illness duration, PRNP genotype and estimation of incubation period in 11 recent kuru patients (Patients' initials are based on name and coded. M, methionine; V, valine; n.a., not available.).
| patient | sex | year of birth | onset | age at onset | death | age at death | duration of illness (months) | likely | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YAK | male | 1948 | Nov 1994 | 46 | Dec 1996 | 48 | 25 | MV | 39 |
| PKW | female | 1946 | Aug 1995 | 49 | Dec 1996 | 50 | 16 | MV | |
| MWK | male | 1933 | Apr 1996 | 63 | Apr 1997 | 64 | 12 | MM | 56 |
| AKA | male | 1949 | Nov 1996 | 47 | Jul 1998 | 49 | 20 | MV | 40 |
| AYY | male | 1940 | Jun 1998 | 58 | Apr 2000 | 60 | 22 | MV | 51 |
| AYA | male | 1936 | Nov 1998 | 62 | Nov 1999 | 63 | 12 | n.a. | 55 |
| WKW | male | 1943 | Jan 1999 | 56 | Jun 2000 | 57 | 17 | MV | 49 |
| TAM | female | 1945 | Mar 1999 | 54 | Jan 2000 | 55 | 10 | VV | |
| MAA | female | 1944 | Apr 1999 | 55 | Jan 2001 | 57 | 21 | MV | |
| INO | female | 1942 | Jan 2000 | 58 | May 2001 | 59 | 16 | MV | |
| KAW | male | 1943 | Oct 2001 | 58 | Apr 2003 | 60 | 18 | MV | 51 |
As males are unlikely to have become infected after the age of 6–8 years (see text), a conservative estimate of the likely minimum incubation period can be calculated as the number of years from age 7 to disease onset.
Figure 1The area and linguistic groups historically affected by kuru in the Eastern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea.
Figure 2Map showing the location of all villages that have had a history of kuru. Of the 172 village names on the map, 155 appear in the database of patients recorded since kuru surveillance began in 1957; however, only 145 of these villages have had confirmed cases during this time. Over 80% of all the recorded cases have occurred among the Fore linguistic group (South and North Fore combined). Map derived from Gajdusek , Alpers (1964, Alpers and the Kuru Surveillance Team (Alpers 2005) and the kuru database (created by M.P.A., Judith Farquhar, Steven Ono and D. Carleton Gajdusek, and maintained by M.P.A.).
Figure 3Tonsil biopsy from patient AKA. (a) Immunoblot analysed with anti-PrP monoclonal antibody 3F4 and enhanced chemifluorescence. Ten-microlitre aliquots of 10% normal human brain homogenate or 10% CJD brain homogenate and 20 μl aliquots of 10% normal human tonsil homogenate or 10% tonsil biopsy homogenate from a patient with kuru were analysed before (PK−) or after (PK+) proteinase K digestion. (b) Immunohistochemical analysis with anti-PrP monoclonal antibody ICSM 35. The photomicrograph shows a lymphoid follicle with abnormal PrP immunoreactivity being absent.