Literature DB >> 30119649

Phenotypic variability of Niemann-Pick disease type C including a case with clinically pure schizophrenia: a case report.

Tomoya Kawazoe1, Toshiyuki Yamamoto1, Aya Narita2, Kousaku Ohno2, Kaori Adachi3, Eiji Nanba3, Atsuko Noguchi4, Tsutomu Takahashi4, Masamitsu Maekawa5, Yoshikatsu Eto6, Masafumi Ogawa1, Miho Murata1, Yuji Takahashi7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a lysosomal storage disorder with severe prognosis. Disease-specific therapy is crucial to prevent disease progression; however, diagnosing NPC is quite difficult because of remarkably variable clinical presentations. The NPC Suspicion Index (NPC-SI) was developed to overcome this problem. Identifying preclinical cases is important for prevention and therapy. Here, we report three newly diagnosed NPC cases, one typical juvenile-onset case and the cases of two sisters with symptoms neurologically/psychiatrically indistinguishable from dystonia and schizophrenia, respectively. CASE
PRESENTATION: In Case 1, a 25-year-old man presented with a 14-year history of intellectual disability, clumsiness, spastic ataxia, dysphagia, and frequent falls. Neurological examination revealed vertical supranuclear gaze palsy and involuntary movements. Ultrasonography revealed mild splenomegaly, and filipin staining of skin fibroblasts was positive with a variant staining pattern. NPC1 gene analysis showed compound heterozygous mutations, including c.1421C > T (p.P474L), a known causative mutation, and c.3722 T > C (p.L1241S), a new mutation. In Case 2, a 28-year-old woman, the proband, who had marked splenomegaly in her childhood, survived well, contrary to the expected severe prognosis of infantile NPC. She had minor neuropsychiatric symptoms including auditory hallucinations, nocturnal urination, and sleep paralysis. At the age of 28 years, she presented with a 1-year history of orofacial and oromandibular painful dystonia. The patient's 35-year-old sister (Case 3) was diagnosed with schizophrenia. In both cases, filipin staining of skin fibroblasts was positive with variant staining patterns, as well as elevated levels of urinary bile acids. NPC1 gene analysis showed compound heterozygous mutations including c.3011C > T (p.S1004 L), a known causative mutation, and c.160_161insG (p.D54GfsX4), a new mutation. Their mother, who was under therapy with modafinil for narcolepsy, shared the latter mutation.
CONCLUSIONS: Marked clinical variability was observed in our three cases. NPC could masquerade as a pure neuropsychiatric disorder such as dystonia or schizophrenia. Abdominal ultrasonography, history evaluation, and neurological examination were quite important in the diagnostic process.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dystonia; Miglustat; NPC1 mutation; Niemann-Pick disease type C; Schizophrenia

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30119649      PMCID: PMC6098631          DOI: 10.1186/s12883-018-1124-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Neurol        ISSN: 1471-2377            Impact factor:   2.474


Background

Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC, MIM# 257220) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disease caused by NPC1 (95%) or NPC2 (5%) gene mutations. If untreated, the prognosis of NPC is severe, with most patients with infantile-, juvenile-, and adult-onset NPC dying by the age of 10 years, before the age of 30 years, and in their mid-30s, respectively [1]. Disease-specific therapies with miglustat [2] or intrathecal 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin [3] are available; therefore, early and accurate diagnosis is critical. However, establishing the diagnosis of NPC is challenging because of its clinical variability. In order to facilitate diagnosis, the NPC Suspicion Index (NPC-SI) was developed, which includes seven key discriminatory features: splenomegaly, neonatal jaundice, gelastic cataplexy, vertical supranuclear gaze palsy (VSGP), cognitive decline, psychotic symptoms, and family history [4]. NPC-SI assists in the identification of neurologically advanced cases with the key clinical features; however, especially in adult cases, an initial diagnosis of psychiatric illness, such as schizophrenia or depression, is usually made and NPC diagnosis is delayed by several years until the appearance of neurological complications [5]. Here, we report three cases of NPC; one juvenile-onset sporadic case and two adult sister cases. The latter two were diagnosed at clinical stages with minimum neurological complications, resulting in early therapeutic interventions.

Case presentation

The case profiles are summarized in Table 1.
Table 1

Case profiles

Case 1Case 2Case 3
Age at onset (years)112722
Initial symptomIntellectual disabilityPainful dystoniaSchizophrenia
Age at diagnosis (years)252835
Visceral signs
 SplenomegalyMildMildMild
 Neonatal jaundice+NoneNone
Neurological signs
 VSGP+NoneNone
 Dysphagia+NoneNone
 Spastic ataxia+NoneNone
 IVMChorea, athetosis, dystonia, myoclonusDystoniaNone
Psychiatric signs
 Cognitive decline+NoneNone
 Psychotic symptoms+++
NPC-SI a
 Percentile98%18%32%
 RPS1834767
Filipin patternVariantVariantVariant
ASM activity221213165
(nmol/mg protein/h)99% of control95% of control73% of control
Phenotype (cDx)JuvenileAdultAdult
NPC1 gene mutations
 Fatherc.1421C > Tc.3011C > Tc.3011C > T
(p.P474L)(p.S1004 L)(p.S1004 L)
 Motherc.3722 T > Cc.160_161insGc.160_161insG
(p.L1241S)(p.D54GfsX4)(p.D54GfsX4)
Brain MRISl. atrophicNormalSl. atrophic
Hypoperfusion on ECD-SPECTFrontalFrontalFrontal
CSF Analysis
 p-Tau (<  55)59 pg/mL47 pg/mL36 pg/mL
 h-Tau (<  300)371 pg/mL214 pg/mL188 pg/mL
Cupper
 Serum Cu (>  68)76 μg/dL82 μg/dL88 μg/dL
 Serum Cp (>  21)22 mg/dL18 mg/dL22 mg/dL
 Urine Cu (>  20)NANA32 μg/day
Urine bile acid b
 SNAG-Δ5-CT (<  11)NA13 ng/mL92 ng/mL
 SNAG-Δ5-CA (<  282)NA42 ng/mL317 ng/mL
 SNAG-Δ5-CG (<  258)NA69 ng/mL481 ng/mL

Abbreviations: ASM Acid sphingomyelinase; cDx Clinical diagnosis; Cp Ceruloplasmin; CSF Cerebrospinal fluid; Cu Copper; ECD-SPECT Technetium-99 m ethyl cysteinate dimer-single photon emission computed tomography; h-Tau Human tau protein; IVM Involuntary movements; MRI Magnetic resonance imaging; NA Not assessed; NPC-SI Niemann-Pick disease type C-suspicion index; p-Tau Phosphorylated tau protein; RPS Risk prediction score; VSGP Vertical supranuclear gaze palsy

a) Hendriksz CJ, et al. J Rare Disord. 2015 [4]. b) Maekawa M, et al. Steroids. 2013 [7]

Case profiles Abbreviations: ASM Acid sphingomyelinase; cDx Clinical diagnosis; Cp Ceruloplasmin; CSF Cerebrospinal fluid; Cu Copper; ECD-SPECT Technetium-99 m ethyl cysteinate dimer-single photon emission computed tomography; h-Tau Human tau protein; IVM Involuntary movements; MRI Magnetic resonance imaging; NA Not assessed; NPC-SI Niemann-Pick disease type C-suspicion index; p-Tau Phosphorylated tau protein; RPS Risk prediction score; VSGP Vertical supranuclear gaze palsy a) Hendriksz CJ, et al. J Rare Disord. 2015 [4]. b) Maekawa M, et al. Steroids. 2013 [7]

Case 1

A 25-year-old man presented with a 14-year history of intellectual disability (since 11 years of age), clumsiness (12 years), spastic ataxia (16 years), slow and slurred speech (17 years), schizophrenic delusions (18 years), dysphagia (19 years), and frequent falls (21 years). He had prolonged neonatal jaundice, for which exploratory laparotomy and simultaneous cholecystectomy were performed at that time. He was also diagnosed with Crohn’s disease at the age of 16 years. Neurological examination at presentation revealed VSGP and involuntary movements including choreoathetosis, dystonia, and myoclonus. Ultrasonography revealed unpalpable mild splenomegaly. The NPC-SI was 98% with a risk prediction score (RPS) of 183 (high likelihood of NPC when the NPC-SI is more than 14% and the RPS is more than 40). Filipin staining of skin fibroblasts showed a variant pattern (Fig. 1). Gene analysis of NPC1 using genomic DNA extracted from the patient’s blood via Sanger sequencing revealed compound heterozygous mutations, including the known c.1421C > T (p.P474L) mutation [6] from the father and a novel c.3722 T > C (p.L1241S) mutation from the mother. We deposited the latter mutation to the Leiden Open Variation Database (LOVD); the individual number of this data entry is 00165102. Oral intake of miglustat for 12 months did not relieve his symptoms. The treatment had to be discontinued because the patient had succumbed to a vegetative state following massive pneumonia secondary to severe ileus due to Crohn’s disease.
Fig. 1

Filipin staining of skin fibroblasts. a Positive typical (classical) control from a patient with Niemann-Pick disease type C. b Negative control from a healthy volunteer. All cases were positive with a variant staining pattern. c Case 1. d Case 2. e Case 3

Filipin staining of skin fibroblasts. a Positive typical (classical) control from a patient with Niemann-Pick disease type C. b Negative control from a healthy volunteer. All cases were positive with a variant staining pattern. c Case 1. d Case 2. e Case 3

Case 2

The proband, a 28-year-old woman, presented with a 1-year history of orofacial and oromandibular dystonic movements. The woman had no neonatal jaundice; however, at the age of 1 year, marked hepatomegaly (2 cm) and splenomegaly (7 cm) were noted. Vacuolated lymphocytes were observed in her blood and cerebrospinal fluid, and many foam cells were observed in the bone marrow. The enzymatic activity of acid sphingomyelinase in skin fibroblasts had decreased to 17 nmol/mg/h (118 ± 53). As there was relatively conserved enzymatic activity (more than 10% of control), a diagnosis of infantile-onset NPC was considered. However, contrary to the expected severe prognosis of known infantile cases, she survived well with minimal neurological symptoms. The patient developed auditory hallucinations, nocturnal urination, and sleep paralysis at the ages of 3, 6, and 9 years, respectively. These symptoms gradually subsided by the age of 12 years. She had an eating disorder between the ages of 17–19 years, and excessive daytime sleepiness appeared at the age of 19 years. Orofacial and oromandibular dystonic movements with facial pain appeared at the age of 27 years. Modafinil 300 mg/day was not effective for sleepiness, and medications such as amitriptyline 10 mg/day, zonisamide 100 mg/day, trihexyphenidyl 2 mg/day, and L-dopa 50 mg/day were not effective for the painful dystonia. Only clonazepam 2 mg/day minimally relieved the symptoms. At the age of 28 years, when she was referred to our hospital, she was neurologically intact except for the dystonia. Ultrasonography detected mild unpalpable splenomegaly. The NPC-SI was 18% with an RPS of 47. Filipin staining of the skin fibroblasts was positive with a variant staining pattern (Fig. 1). The urinary levels of bile acids [7] were partially elevated (Table 1). NPC1 gene analysis showed compound heterozygous mutations including the known c.3011C > T (p.S1004 L) mutation [8] from the father and a new mutation of c.160_161insG (p.D54GfsX4) from the mother. Oral intake of miglustat for more than 12 months was not effective for the painful dystonia.

Case 3

The elder sister of the patient in Case 2 was clinically diagnosed with schizophrenia, with good response to antipsychotic medications and was later found to have NPC. She was examined at the age of 8 years, when her younger sister was suspected to have NPC; however, she was neurologically intact with no splenomegaly at that time. By the age of 22 years, she began showing signs of schizophrenia; an official diagnosis confirmed the disease at the age of 25 years. She responded well to risperidone 3 mg/day. When we examined her at the age of 35 years, she was neurologically intact. Moreover, in this Case, ultrasonography detected mild unpalpable splenomegaly. Given the family history of Case 2, the NPC-SI was 32% with an RPS of 67. NPC1 gene analysis detected the same mutations with those observed in Case 2. We deposited the new mutation to LOVD; the individual numbers are 00165175 (Case 2) and 00165176 (Case 3). Oral intake of miglustat for 20 months improved her psychotic symptoms, and her attending psychiatrist diagnosed complete remission of schizophrenia.

Discussion and conclusions

This case series highlights that patients with NPC may exhibit remarkable phenotypic variability, which in our cases ranged from juvenile-onset progressive neuropsychiatric deterioration to adult psychiatric symptoms clinically indistinguishable from schizophrenia. The phenotypic variability is further supported by previous studies reporting that a substantial number of patients with NPC do not exhibit cardinal symptoms such as VSGP and dysphagia [9, 10]. Phenotypic heterogeneity was even observed in a case of monozygotic twins [11]. Meanwhile, the international study on genetic screening for psychiatric patients with neurological symptoms or splenomegaly, known as the ZOOM study, demonstrated that 3 of 250 participants harbored pathogenic mutations in NPC1 [12]. Of note, the patient in Case 3 did not show any neurological symptoms at the time of NPC diagnosis. Therefore, the phenotypes of NPC must be more diverse than previously thought, and patients with mild clinical manifestations may remain undiagnosed. Based on these observations, we would like to emphasize that NPC should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a wide variety of disease entities, including juvenile-onset multi-systemic neurological disorders and adult psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia. It is of vital importance to accurately diagnose NPC because disease-modifying therapies are available. Furthermore, it is imperative to diagnose it in the early stages, particularly in cases with mild neurological symptoms, because of the severe prognosis of adult NPC, which results in death at a mean age of 38 years [9] or 33 years [10], and the difficulty in ameliorating the neurological symptoms even with miglustat, when the disease is at an advanced stage. In contrast, the appearance of psychotic symptoms consistent with schizophrenia or depression precedes the appearance of neurological complications by several years in more than half of the cases [13], and the effectiveness of miglustat in alleviating the psychotic symptoms [14] has been reported, further corroborating the importance of early detection. For this purpose, the NPC-SI was invented and revised based on the cardinal features of NPC [4]. The NPC-SI in this study varied greatly, depending on the extent to which the key features were detected at the time of diagnosis. The NPC-SI showed that there was high likelihood of NPC in all cases, with the recommendation that the patients should be referred to the NPC referral center (institute) for immediate testing, highlighting the clinical usefulness of the NPC-SI. The fact that the mean RPS of adult cases was as high as 179 [15] implies that most cases were diagnosed at a stage of fully present clinical manifestations. To benefit from the NPC-SI, it is imperative to enhance the awareness of its usefulness in daily clinical settings, particularly in adult neurology. In Japan, the current initial diagnostic workup for NPC includes a combination of serum oxysterol (7-ketocholesterol) and urinary bile acids, followed by more specific diagnostic procedures including skin biopsy with filipin staining and NPC1 or NPC2 gene analysis. In our cases, mild elevation of urine bile acids in Cases 2 and 3 was informative in the initial workup, whereas the oxysterol value in Case 2 was normal (could not be tested in Cases 1 and 3). Additionally, in line with previous reports, cerebrospinal tau proteins were elevated in Case 1 [16] and the laboratory values of copper metabolism slightly deviated or were close to the lower limit of the normal levels [17]. Recently, it has been reported that plasma oxysterol (cholestane-3β,5α,6β-triol) is informative in the detection of NPC [18]. Additionally, lysosphingolipids have been proposed as a potential biomarker for NPC [19]. Establishing excellent biomarkers for NPC is highly warranted considering that skin biopsy and genetic analyses are time-consuming and expensive procedures. Finally, we would like to focus on the narcolepsy experienced by the mother of Cases 2 and 3, who shared the c.160_161insG (p.D54GfsX4) mutation. In addition to gelastic cataplexy as one of the key discriminatory features of NPC, sleep problems, such as excessive daytime sleepiness, are known to be related to NPC, presumably via dysfunction of the locus coeruleus [20]. Regarding partial manifestations in people with NPC1 gene heterozygosity, a previous report of a family whose proband developed late infantile NPC with compound heterozygous mutations of NPC1 described that the heterozygous asymptomatic carriers of NPC mutations, the oldest sister and parents, had foam cells in their bone marrow smears [21]. Likewise, it is possible that the haploinsufficiency of the NPC1 gene identified in our pedigree could also cause mild tissue changes resulting in manifesting carriers. Accumulation of familial histories and genetic evidence is necessary to analyze the relationship between narcolepsy and NPC1 mutation carriers. We hypothesize that NPC1 might be an extremely rare candidate gene for familial narcolepsy syndrome. In conclusion, the cases described in this report highlight the clinical variability of NPC and reinforce the importance of early diagnosis of this rare disease to initiate disease-modifying therapy. We would like to emphasize that the exploration of disease-suggestive findings by use of the NPC-SI in patients with schizophrenia would enhance the diagnostic accuracy of NPC.
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Review 2.  Cataplexy and sleep disorders in Niemann-Pick type C disease.

Authors:  Sona Nevsimalova; Vera Malinova
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Review 4.  Niemann-Pick disease type C.

Authors:  Marie T Vanier
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5.  LC/ESI-MS/MS analysis of urinary 3β-sulfooxy-7β-N-acetylglucosaminyl-5-cholen-24-oic acid and its amides: new biomarkers for the detection of Niemann-Pick type C disease.

Authors:  Masamitsu Maekawa; Yasushi Misawa; Ayako Sotoura; Hiroaki Yamaguchi; Masami Togawa; Kousaku Ohno; Hiroshi Nittono; Genta Kakiyama; Takashi Iida; Alan F Hofmann; Junichi Goto; Miki Shimada; Nariyasu Mano
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6.  Molecular and biochemical biomarkers for diagnosis and therapy monitorization of Niemann-Pick type C patients.

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Journal:  Int J Dev Neurosci       Date:  2017-11-29       Impact factor: 2.457

7.  Intrathecal 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin decreases neurological disease progression in Niemann-Pick disease, type C1: a non-randomised, open-label, phase 1-2 trial.

Authors:  Daniel S Ory; Elizabeth A Ottinger; Nicole Yanjanin Farhat; Kelly A King; Xuntian Jiang; Lisa Weissfeld; Elizabeth Berry-Kravis; Cristin D Davidson; Simona Bianconi; Lee Ann Keener; Ravichandran Rao; Ariane Soldatos; Rohini Sidhu; Kimberly A Walters; Xin Xu; Audrey Thurm; Beth Solomon; William J Pavan; Bernardus N Machielse; Mark Kao; Steven A Silber; John C McKew; Carmen C Brewer; Charles H Vite; Steven U Walkley; Christopher P Austin; Forbes D Porter
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2017-08-10       Impact factor: 202.731

8.  Niemann-Pick type C Suspicion Index tool: analyses by age and association of manifestations.

Authors:  James E Wraith; Frédéric Sedel; Mercèdes Pineda; Frits A Wijburg; Christian J Hendriksz; Michael Fahey; Mark Walterfang; Marc C Patterson; Harbajan Chadha-Boreham; Stefan A Kolb
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10.  Genetic screening for Niemann-Pick disease type C in adults with neurological and psychiatric symptoms: findings from the ZOOM study.

Authors:  Peter Bauer; David J Balding; Hans H Klünemann; David E J Linden; Daniel S Ory; Mercè Pineda; Josef Priller; Frederic Sedel; Audrey Muller; Harbajan Chadha-Boreham; Richard W D Welford; Daniel S Strasser; Marc C Patterson
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Review 3.  Psychiatric and Cognitive Symptoms Associated with Niemann-Pick Type C Disease: Neurobiology and Management.

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