Literature DB >> 30243861

Biological and clinical manifestations of juvenile Huntington's disease: a retrospective analysis.

Caterina Fusilli1, Simone Migliore2, Tommaso Mazza1, Federica Consoli3, Alessandro De Luca3, Gaetano Barbagallo4, Andrea Ciammola5, Emilia Mabel Gatto6, Martin Cesarini6, Jose Luis Etcheverry6, Virginia Parisi6, Musallam Al-Oraimi7, Salma Al-Harrasi7, Qasem Al-Salmi7, Massimo Marano8, Jean-Paul Gerard Vonsattel9, Umberto Sabatini10, Georg Bernhard Landwehrmeyer11, Ferdinando Squitieri12.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Huntington's disease is a rare, neurodegenerative disease caused by an expanded CAG repeat mutation in the huntingtin gene. Compared with adult-onset Huntington's disease, juvenile Huntington's disease (onset ≤20 years) is even rarer and has not been studied extensively. We aimed to further characterise juvenile Huntington's disease by examining the effect of CAG repeat size on disease presentation, progression, and survival.
METHODS: We did a retrospective analysis of patients with juvenile Huntington's disease aged 20 years or younger, according to the length of their CAG repeat and who had disabling psychiatric symptoms (with motor symptoms) or motor symptoms alone, and of patients with adult-onset Huntington's disease manifesting aged 30-60 years with 40 or more CAG repeats, from the REGISTRY and ENROLL-HD platforms and from two institutional databases (Lega Italiana Ricerca Huntington Foundation and the Instituto Neurociencias de Buenos Aires and the Sanatorio de la Trinidad Mitre). Patients with psychiatric but no motor symptoms were excluded. We compared symptoms at onset and longitudinally in patients with juvenile Huntington's disease with highly expanded (HE subgroup) or low expansion (LE subgroup) mutations, grouped by hierarchical clustering analysis. We also compared disease progression (longitudinal change in Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale-Total Motor Score) and survival of patients with juvenile and adult-onset Huntington's disease.
FINDINGS: We extracted medical records from 580 patients entered into the studies or databases between June 23, 2004, and March 31, 2018, of whom 36 patients met our definition of juvenile Huntington's disease and 197 for adult-onset Huntington's disease. According to caregiver reports, gait disturbance was more often a first presenting symptom in the HE subgroup (eight [80%] of 10 patients) than in the LE subgroup (seven [27%] of 26 patients; p=0·0071), whereas loss of hand dexterity was more common in the LE subgroup (11 [42%] of 26 patients) than in the HE subgroup (0 [0%] of 10 patients; p=0·0160). Compared with the LE subgroup, development delay (0 [0%] in the LE subgroup vs nine [90%] in the HE subgroup; p<0·0001), severe gait impairment (nine [35%] in the LE subgroup vs nine [90%] in the HE subgroup; p=0·0072), and seizures (three [11%] in the LE subgroup vs eight [80%] in the HE subgroup; p<0·0001) prevailed over time in the HE subgroup. Disease progression was more rapid in juvenile Huntington's disease (n=14) than in adult-onset Huntington's disease (n=52; generalised estimating equation model, p=0·0003). Of 121 deceased patients, median survival was shorter in the juvenile Huntington's disease (n=17) cohort than in adult-onset Huntington's disease (n=104) cohort (hazard ratio 2·18 [95% CI 1·08-4·40]; p=0·002).
INTERPRETATION: Patients with HE juvenile Huntington's disease differ clinically from patients with LE juvenile Huntington's disease or adult-onset Huntington's disease, suggesting reclassification of this particularly aggressive form of Huntington's disease might be required. FUNDING: Lega Italiana Ricerca Huntington Foundation and IRCCS Ospedale Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30243861     DOI: 10.1016/S1474-4422(18)30294-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet Neurol        ISSN: 1474-4422            Impact factor:   44.182


  26 in total

Review 1.  The Efficacy and Safety of Pridopidine on Treatment of Patients with Huntington's Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Moamen Mostafa Asla; Asmaa Ahmed Nawar; Alaa Abdelsalam; Esraa Elsayed; Marwa Abdelazim Rizk; Mohamed Alaa Hussein; Walaa A Kamel
Journal:  Mov Disord Clin Pract       Date:  2021-10-29

2.  Quantifying the Onset of Unintended Weight Loss in Huntington's Disease: A Retrospective Analysis of Enroll-HD.

Authors:  Amy C Ogilvie; Peg C Nopoulos; Jordan L Schultz
Journal:  J Huntingtons Dis       Date:  2021

3.  Abnormal brain development in child and adolescent carriers of mutant huntingtin.

Authors:  Ellen van der Plas; Douglas R Langbehn; Amy L Conrad; Timothy R Koscik; Alexander Tereshchenko; Eric A Epping; Vincent A Magnotta; Peggy C Nopoulos
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2019-08-01       Impact factor: 9.910

4.  Timing and Impact of Psychiatric, Cognitive, and Motor Abnormalities in Huntington Disease.

Authors:  Branduff McAllister; James F Gusella; G Bernhard Landwehrmeyer; Jong-Min Lee; Marcy E MacDonald; Michael Orth; Anne E Rosser; Nigel M Williams; Peter Holmans; Lesley Jones; Thomas H Massey
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2021-03-25       Impact factor: 11.800

Review 5.  Juvenile-Onset Huntington Disease Pathophysiology and Neurodevelopment: A Review.

Authors:  Hannah S Bakels; Raymund A C Roos; Willeke M C van Roon-Mom; Susanne T de Bot
Journal:  Mov Disord       Date:  2021-10-12       Impact factor: 9.698

6.  Dysregulation of the Basal Ganglia Indirect Pathway in Early Symptomatic Q175 Huntington's Disease Mice.

Authors:  Joshua W Callahan; David L Wokosin; Mark D Bevan
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 6.709

Review 7.  Combined dystonias: clinical and genetic updates.

Authors:  Anne Weissbach; Gerard Saranza; Aloysius Domingo
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2020-10-24       Impact factor: 3.575

Review 8.  Juvenile Huntington's Disease and Other PolyQ Diseases, Update on Neurodevelopmental Character and Comparative Bioinformatic Review of Transcriptomic and Proteomic Data.

Authors:  Karolina Świtońska-Kurkowska; Bart Krist; Joanna Delimata; Maciej Figiel
Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2021-07-01

9.  Behavioral Deficits in Juvenile Onset Huntington's Disease.

Authors:  Kathleen E Langbehn; Ashley M Cochran; Ellen van der Plas; Amy L Conrad; Eric Epping; Erin Martin; Patricia Espe-Pfeifer; Peg Nopoulos
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2020-08-11

10.  Patterns of CAG repeat instability in the central nervous system and periphery in Huntington's disease and in spinocerebellar ataxia type 1.

Authors:  Ricardo Mouro Pinto; Larissa Arning; James V Giordano; Pedram Razghandi; Marissa A Andrew; Tammy Gillis; Kevin Correia; Jayalakshmi S Mysore; Debora-M Grote Urtubey; Constanze R Parwez; Sarah M von Hein; H Brent Clark; Huu Phuc Nguyen; Eckart Förster; Allison Beller; Suman Jayadaev; C Dirk Keene; Thomas D Bird; Diane Lucente; Jean-Paul Vonsattel; Harry Orr; Carsten Saft; Elisabeth Petrasch-Parwez; Vanessa C Wheeler
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2020-08-29       Impact factor: 6.150

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