| Literature DB >> 27044540 |
Sigrid Baldanzi1, Francesca Bevilacqua2, Rita Lorio2, Leda Volpi1, Costanza Simoncini1, Antonio Petrucci3, Mirco Cosottini4, Gabriele Massimetti5, Gloria Tognoni1, Giulia Ricci1, Corrado Angelini2, Gabriele Siciliano6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (Steinert's disease or DM1), the most common form of autosomal dominant muscular dystrophy in adults, is a multisystem disorder, affecting skeletal muscle as well as eyes, heart, gastrointestinal tract, endocrine system, and central nervous system, finally responsible of increasing disabilities and secondary social consequences. To date, DM1-related brain involvement represents a challenging field of research. It is well known that DM1 patients frequently present neuropsychological disturbances and psychiatric comorbidities among which reduced awareness of disease burden and its progression, also defined as anosognosia, is common in clinical practice, this leading to secondary misattribution of symptoms, delay in timely diagnostic procedures and low compliance to treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Disease unawareness; Myotonic dystrophy type 1; Neuropsychological impairment; Quality of life; Steinert’s disease
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27044540 PMCID: PMC4820880 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0417-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Clinical and demographic characteristics of recruited DM1 patients
| Patients Enrolled | 81 |
| Drop-out | 16 |
| Final Sample | 65 |
| Age | 46.1 ± 12.3 yrs |
| Age range: 18–70 yrs | |
| Sex | F = 37 % (24) |
| M = 63 % (41) | |
| Age at onset | 31.5 ± 14.7 yrs |
| [CTG]n E1 | 37.7 % (25) |
| [CTG]n E2 | 58.5 % (38) |
| [CTG]n E3 | 3.8 % (2) |
| Transmission | 78 % paternal |
| 22 % maternal | |
| Educational level | Mean 11.6 ± 3.5 yrs |
| Time from disease onset | Mean 10.2 ± 7.4 yrs |
| Severity of muscular involvement (MIRS) | Mean = 2.85 ± 1 |
| MIRS = 1 | 7.3 % |
| MIRS = 2 | 36.4 % |
| MIRS = 3 | 27.3 % |
| MIRS = 4 | 21.8 % |
| MIRS = 5 | 7.3 % |
Psychological characterization of DM1 patients by clinical scale administration (Beck Depression Inventory, BDI-II; State Trate Anxiety Inventory, STAI-Y2; Apathy Evaluation Scale, AES) BDI-II: total score ranges 0–63, normal ratings ranking below 9 for men and o13 for women STAI-Y2: total score ranges 20–80, threshold value = 40 AES: total score ranges 0–54, cut-off threshold = 18
| Mean (SD) | |
|---|---|
| BDI-II (depressive symptoms) | 10.6 (8.4) |
| STAI-Y2 (anxiety symptoms) | 39.1 (10.0) |
| AES (apathetic behaviour) | 18,2 (9.5) |
Neuropsychological functioning. Test scores are expressed as mean, (SD). Percentages of impairment (% impaired) are related to available cut-off scores of normality (≥95 % of the tolerance limit of the normal population distribution); statistically significant differences between patients and healthy controls are shown in bold
| DM1 patients ( | Controls ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| mean corrected scores | % impaired | mean corrected scores |
| |
| RAVLT IR | 42 (7.2) | 5.8 | 46.8 (8.4) |
|
| RAVLT DR | 9.1 (1.8) | 1.9 | 9.8 (2.5) | .370 |
| Rey Osterrieth Figure (ROCF) Copy | 27.5 (6.5) | 46.9 | 32 (6.5) |
|
| Rey Osterrieth Figure (ROCF) IR | 13.8 (6.0) | 32.7 | 19.8 (6.6) |
|
| Rey Osterrieth Figure (ROCF) DR | 13.2 (6.7) | 36.7 | 19.7 (6.4) |
|
| Digit Span | 5.1 (1.1) | 24 | 6.2 (1.2) |
|
| Corsi’s Block Test (CBT) | 4 (0.8) | 43.1 | 5 (0.8) |
|
| Trail Making Test A (TMT A) | 55.5 (34.9) | 21.3 | 41 (14.3) |
|
| Trail making Test B (TMT B) | 130.5 (60) | 17.4 | 108.3 (47.2) | .072 |
| FAS (phonemic fluency) | 28.4 (9.8) | 25.5 | 44.7 (9.0) |
|
| FAB | 15 (1.4) | 25 | 16.3 (0.6) |
|
| STROOP Time Interference | 32.8 (24.8) | 32.7 | 18.9 (6.4) |
|
| STROOP Error Interference | 3.2 (4.4) | 36.7 | 1 (0.9) |
|
| PM47 | 30.8 (36.4) | 18.9 | 30.6 (2.3) |
|
| WCST Categories (Cat) | 3.8 (1.9) | 43.4 | 5.6 (0.8) |
|
| WCST Perseverative Errors (pe) | 5.5 (4.4) | 47.2 | 1.9 (1.2) |
|
Fig. 1Percentages of DM1 patients who show critically relevant neuropsychological dysfunctions across different cognitive domains (N = 65). Percentages of impairment (%) are related to available cut-off scores of normality (≥95 % of the tolerance limit of the normal population distribution)
Stepwise logistic regression analysis in 81 subjects (65 DM1 patients, 26 healthy subjects): CBT and ROCF-copy performances as predicting variables
| STEP | Cognitive test | b (SE) | O.R. | C.I. 95 % | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Constant | 6.56 (1.78) | - | - | - |
| CBT | −1.31 (0.38) | 0.27 | 0.13–0.57 | .001 | |
|
| Constant | 8.19 (2.07) | - | - | - |
| CBT | −1.21 (0.41) | 0.30 | 0.13–0.67 | .003 | |
| ROCF-copy | −1.13 (0.05) | 0.88 | 0.80–0.97 | .007 |
STEP 2 R2 : Cox-Snell = .29, Nagelkerke = .40, Hosmer-Lemenshow: chi-square = 7.36, p = .498
percentage of overall correct prediction = 76.7 %
Group comparison between anosognosic (n = 33) and non anosognosic (n = 31) DM1 patients, in cognitive domains of functioning; statistically significant p-values are shown in bold
| Anosognosic ( | Non anosognosic ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| mean corrected scores (SD) | mean corrected scores (SD) |
| |
| RAVLT IR | 41.1 (7.8) | 42.1 (6.9) | .612 |
| RAVLT DR | 9.0 (1.7) | 9.1 (1.8) | .851 |
| Rey Osterrieth Figure (ROCF) Copy | 27.6 (6.1) | 28.5 (5.7) | .597 |
| Rey Osterrieth Figure (ROCF) IR | 12.8 (6.3) | 15.5 (5.5) | .124 |
| Rey Osterrieth Figure (ROCF) DR | 12.3 (6.6) | 14.5 (6.8) | .265 |
| Digit Span | 5.1 (1.2) | 5.2 (1.1) | .813 |
| Corsi’s Block Test (CBT) | 3.9 (0.8) | 4.4 (0.6) | .060a |
| Trail Making Test A (TMT A) | 54.1 (19.9) | 57.8 (46.1) | .732 |
| Trail making Test B (TMT B) | 140.2 (78.9) | 122.3 (31.4) | .351 |
| FAS (phonemic fluency) | 26.3 (8.7) | 31.3 (10.5) | .083 |
| FAB | 15.1 (1.2) | 15.3 (1.4) | .576 |
| STROOP Time Interference | 33.5 (28.4) | 32.4 (22.2) | .881 |
| STROOP Error Interference | 3.4 (5.3) | 2.5 (2.6) | .487 |
| PM47 | 25.5 (0.3) | 27.5 (4.2) | .202 |
| WCST Categories (Cat) | 3.0 (1.9) | 4.7 (1.5) |
|
| WCST Perseverative Errors (pe) | 6.7 (4.6) | 4.0 (3.4) |
|
a considerable trend toward significance
Fig. 2INQoL Domain Scores representing the impact of each impaired domain on patients quality of life; the bars show standard errors. Higher scores indicate the higher impact of disease (N = 64)
Characteristics of patients’ and caregiver’s reports at INQoL interview; discrepancy scores are shown in bold (N = 64)
| INQoL items (range) | Subitems INQoL | Patient’s rating mean (SD) | Caregiver’s rating mean (SD) | Discrepancy mean (caregiver score – patient score) | N° pt. with reduced awareness of illness (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Weakness (0–19) |
| 10.1 (5.4) | - | - | |
| 2. Stiffening (0–19) | - | 7.4 (6) | - | - | |
| 3. Pain (0–19) | - | 5.1 (6) | - | - | |
| 4. Fatigue (0–19) | - | 8.9 (5.6) | - | - | |
| 5. Activity (0–18) | - | 11.1 (8.3) | 10.9 (10.6) |
| 23 (35.9) |
| 6. Independence (0–18) | - | 6.2 (5.4) | 7.9 (5.6) |
| 24 (37.5) |
| 7. Relationships (0–24) | - | 6.8 (8.7) | 10.1 (11.8) |
| 27 (42.2) |
| 8. Emotional | Anxiety (0–6) | 2.3 (1.7) | 2.8 (1.9) |
| 7 (10.9) |
| Depression (0–6) | 1.8 (1.7) | 1.8 (1.7) |
| 6 (9.3) | |
| Frustration (0–6) | 1.3 (1.7) | 1.8 (1.8) |
| 8 (12.5) | |
| Self-esteem (0–6) | 1.1 (1.6) | 1.6 (1.7) |
| 7 (10.4) | |
| 9. Physical appearance (0–18) |
| 5.6 (4.6) | - | - |
|
INQoL total mean (SD) = 19.1 (13.1)
* Statistical significance at p < 0.05
Fig. 3Patients (blue) vs main caregiver (red) mean ratings in INQoL Life Domains (N = 64)
Fig. 4Bland-Altman plot with 95 % limits of agreements for the combined graphical/statistical interpretation of patients’ self evaluation of muscular weakness (INQoL Weakness Domain score) to clinician’s objective muscular evaluation (MIRS) in DM1 patients. The differences between MIRS and INQoL Weakness Domain score are plotted against their mean and the mean difference; light spots indicate single observation, dark spots indicate collinear observations; 95 % confidence limit lines are drawn (brown dotted lines)