| Literature DB >> 26696957 |
John S Butler1, Ines M Beiser2, Laura Williams2, Eavan McGovern2, Fiona Molloy3, Tim Lynch4, Dan G Healy3, Helena Moore5, Richard Walsh6, Richard B Reilly7, Seán O'Riordan2, Cathal Walsh8, Michael Hutchinson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adult-onset isolated focal dystonia (AOIFD) presenting in early adult life is more frequent in men, whereas in middle age it is female predominant. Temporal discrimination, an endophenotype of adult-onset idiopathic isolated focal dystonia, shows evidence of sexual dimorphism in healthy participants.Entities:
Keywords: adult-onset isolated focal dystonia; penetrance; sex ratio; sexual dimorphism; temporal discrimination
Year: 2015 PMID: 26696957 PMCID: PMC4677337 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Meta-regression analysis of relationship between mean age of onset and sex ratio in phenotypes of adult-onset dystonia.
| Coefficient | SE | Confidence intervals | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 2.8780 | 0.4487 | 6.4141 | <0.0001 | 1.9986 | 3.7574 |
| Age of onset | −0.0709 | 0.0098 | −7.2655 | <0.0001 | −0.0900 | −0.0518 |
| Intercept | −0.8387 | 0.1101 | −7.6183 | <0.0001 | −1.0545 | −0.6229 |
| Cervical dystonia | 0.351 | 0.1451 | 2.42 | 0.0155 | 0.067 | 0.6353 |
| Focal hand dystonia | 1.17 | 0.17 | 6.93 | <0.0001 | 0.84 | 1.50 |
| Laryngeal dystonia | 0.047 | 0.19 | 0.243 | 0.808 | −0.33 | 0.42 |
| Musician’s dystonia | 2.30 | 0.27 | 8.50 | <0.0001 | 1.77 | 2.83 |
| Intercept | 4.7640 | 1.1084 | 4.2982 | <0.0001 | 2.5916 | 6.9364 |
| Age of onset | −0.1002 | 0.0197 | −5.0840 | <0.0001 | 0.1388 | 0.0616 |
| Cervical dystonia | −1.0618 | 0.3013 | −3.5239 | 0.0004 | 1.6523 | 0.4712 |
| Focal hand dystonia | −0.4995 | 0.3556 | −1.4046 | 0.1601 | −1.1966 | 0.1975 |
| Laryngeal dystonia | −0.8752 | 0.2386 | −3.6685 | 0.0002 | 1.3429 | 0.4076 |
| Musician’s dystonia | 0.0306 | 0.5006 | 0.0611 | 0.9513 | −0.9505 | 1.0117 |
Meta-regression analysis of the two independent variables of interest: (a) mean age of onset of dystonia, (b) adult-onset dystonia phenotype, and (c) combined variables [(a) and (b)] with the sex ratio (proportion of men) as the dependent variable. Coefficients, SEs, p values, and 95% confidence intervals are shown; p values <0.05 are considered to be statistically significant.
Figure 1Meta-regression analysis of the relationship between sex ratio (proportion of men) and mean age of onset in phenotypes of adult-onset dystonia. Fifty-three reports of mean age of onset and sex ratio of five adult-onset dystonia phenotypes (listed in Table S1 in Supplementary Material). In each filled circle, the diameter of the circle is proportional to the square root of the number of individuals in that study. Circle color indicates musician’s dystonia (pink), focal hand dystonia (blue), cervical dystonia (green), laryngeal dystonia (turquoise), and blepharospasm (red). A linear decreasing proportion of men (reducing male:female ratio) with increasing mean age of onset is statistically significant (p < 0.0001). The pseudo-R2 value for this association is 59.63%. The solid line is the fitted meta-regression back transformed from the logit scale. The dashed lines are the 95% confidence intervals for the mean association back transformed to the original scale.
Figure 2Sexual dimorphism in temporal discrimination in unaffected first-degree relatives of cervical dystonia patients. The effect of age and gender on the temporal discrimination threshold (in milliseconds) in 220 unaffected first-degree relatives of patients with cervical dystonia. Each open circle represents an individual relative’s temporal discrimination threshold (men: blue; women: red). The solid lines represent the regression fit of the data for men (blue) and women (red) of temporal discrimination thresholds with age. The broken red and blue lines indicate the regression fit of the temporal discrimination threshold for 175 healthy control participants [from Ref. (15)]. The sexually dimorphic effects of age on the temporal discrimination thresholds in men and women are statistically significant for both the unaffected first-degree relatives and the healthy control participants.
Figure 3Meta-analysis of mean age of onset of cervical dystonia in men and women: meta-analysis of the mean age of onset by sex in our cohort of 278 cervical dystonia patients and 3 other studies which reported mean age of onset of cervical dystonia for both sexes (16–18). This analysis demonstrated a significantly earlier mean age of onset for men than women. The mean age of onset of cervical dystonia was significantly earlier by 4.30 years (95% CI; 1.80–6.80) in men than women (p = 0.0008).
Figure 4Graphic illustrating the relationship between age-related sexual dimorphism in temporal discrimination thresholds, mean age of onset and sex ratios in phenotypes of adult-onset isolated focal dystonia. Temporal discrimination (in milliseconds) is inverted on the left Y-axis so that worse discrimination is lower on the axis. The X-axis represents age in years (open arrow at the top of the figure). Each of the five phenotypes (musician’s dystonia, focal hand dystonia, cervical dystonia, laryngeal dystonia, and blepharospasm) are represented by filled bars, positioned at their mean age of onset, with the sex ratio for each phenotype illustrated by the colored inserts (pink for women: blue for men) (right Y-axis); the increasing female:male sex ratio with age is illustrated by the relative size of the filled bars. The regression lines (red for women; blue for men) from the analysis of the temporal discrimination thresholds (TDTs) in the unaffected first-degree relatives are drawn to illustrate the age-related sexual dimorphism of the TDT in relationship to the increasing female predominance with age of the phenotypes.