| Literature DB >> 31053787 |
Clara Serra-Juhe1, Eduardo F Tizzano2,3.
Abstract
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal-recessive neuromuscular disorder representing a continuous spectrum of muscular weakness ranging from compromised neonates to adults with minimal manifestations. Patients show homozygous absence or disease-causing variants of the SMN1 gene (-/- or 0/0) and in carriers only one copy is absent or mutated (1/0). Genetic diagnosis and counseling in SMA present several challenges, including the existence of carriers (2/0) that are undistinguishable of non-carriers (1/1) with current genetic testing methods and the report of patients (0/0) with very mild manifestations and even asymptomatic that are discovered when a full symptomatic case appears in the family. Younger asymptomatic siblings of symptomatic SMA patients are usually never tested until adolescence or adult life. However, following regulatory approval of the first tailored treatment for SMA, the prospects for care of these patients have changed. Early testing, including pre-symptomatic newborn screening and confirmation of diagnosis would change proactive measures and opportunities for therapy based in the actual landscape of new treatments. This review discusses the challenges and new perspectives of genetic counseling in SMA.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31053787 PMCID: PMC6871529 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-019-0415-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246
Spinal muscular atrophy classification considering motor milestones achieved and the wide spectrum of manifestations of the disease including asymptomatic cases that are haploidentical to their corresponding more affected siblings (considered as type-V form)
| Main SMA type | Subclassification | Onset | Milestones achieved | Evolution/natural history | Prevalent SMN2 copies | Representative references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Ia (also referred as type 0)a | Prenatal | None | Death in weeks Contractures Cardiopathy | 1 | [ |
| I | Ib | <3 months | Poor or none cephalic control | Feeding and respiratory problems Linear declination Death after second or third year of life | 2 | [ |
| I | Ic | >3 months | Cephalic control | Feeding and respiratory problems Plateau in first 2 years | 3 | [ |
| II | IIa | >6 months | Sitter | Scoliosis May lose sitting capability | 3 | [ |
| II | IIb | Usually after 12 months | Sitter | Scoliosis May stand with support | 3 | [ |
| III | IIIa | Between 18 and 36 months | Walker unaided | Scoliosis Earlier loss of walking | 3 | [ |
| III | IIIb | >3 years | Walker unaided | Later loss of walking | 3–4 | [ |
| IV | Noneb | Second/third decade of life | Walker unaided | Most of life walking | 3–5 | [ |
| V | None | SMN1 absence with minimal manifestations or asymptomatic | All major milestones | Complete life walking | 3–5 | [ |
SMA spinal muscular atrophy, SMN1, 2 Survival motor neuron 1, 2
aSome authors reserve the term type Ia to describe patients who are very severe starting in a few days to differentiate the typical congenital form as type 0. In our Table, we consider type 0 or type Ia as those patients in the extreme category of severity with one SMN2 copy
bSome authors consider type IV as a type IIIb with adult onset
Fig. 1Neuromuscular milestones and trajectories from birth to adult life in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) types. SMA patients present a pre-symptomatic phase, which is considered a therapeutic window to initiate the most effective intervention and treatment before substantial motor neuron loss occurs. Type-I disease has an acute phase with linear decline to death if no invasive respiratory intervention is made (dashed orange line). Type-II and -III SMA have a subacute onset in infancy and a late chronic more stable phase. Some type III patients maintain the walking ability for years (thick dashed blue line). Type-IV disease appears gradually during adult life. All SMA types can be treated early at pre-symptomatic stages according to the length of their respective and different therapeutic windows and is very likely that these patients will closely follow the green normal line. Treatment in already symptomatic patients may change trajectories with the slopes tending to reach the green normal line depending on each case (onset of disease, onset of treatment) and with new emerging phenotypes. Type-0 trajectories are not represented. Based on [4, 9, 12–16]
Wilson–Jungner criteria and references in support of their accomplishment in SMA
| Criteria | Accomplishment | References |
|---|---|---|
| 1. The condition sought should be an important health problem | Yes | [ |
| 2. There should be an accepted treatment for patients with recognized disease | Yes | [ |
| 3. Facilities for diagnosis and treatment should be available | Yes | [ |
| 4. There should be a recognizable latent or early symptomatic stage | Yes | [ |
| 5. There should be a suitable test or examination | Yes | [ |
| 6. The test should be acceptable to the population | Yes | [ |
| 7. The natural history of the condition, including development from latent to declared disease, should be adequately understood | Yes | [ |
| 8. There should be an agreed policy on whom to treat as patients | Still debatable/ongoing | [ |
| 9. The cost of case-finding should be economically balanced in relation to possible expenditure on medical care as a whole | Yes | [ |
| 10. Case-finding should be a continuing process and not a “once and for all” project | Yes | [ |
SMA spinal muscular atrophy
Fig. 2Epidemiologic evolution and prevention policies in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). The actual situation of treatment of symptomatic cases when disease is already established (tertiary prevention, with a main effect in standard of care and evolving phenotypes) should change to implement newborn screening to treat patients before symptoms during the therapeutic window (secondary prevention, with a main effect in burden and development of disease). This would allow also detection of other carriers in the family. Public health policies should consider in the near future population carrier testing not only specific to SMA but several other autosomal-recessive conditions (primary prevention). These measures unavoidably will decrease the incidence and the prevalence of the disease in the future
Fig. 3Changing scenario of access to treatment in spinal muscular atrophy. At present (upper triangle), the new treatments reach fewer pre-symptomatic babies, almost all newly symptomatic cases, and an important number of historical patients. The implementation of universal newborn screening (lower triangle) would modify the proportion and most of the patients will be treated at pre-symptomatic stages, fewer will be newly symptomatic (because of false negative in newborn screening, i.e., disease-causing point mutations), and the vast majority of the historical cases will be already under treatment
Phenotypic discordances in SMA according to SMN2 copies
| Observed discordances | Situation | Possible explanation/cause | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| More severe phenotype than expected by the | Type-I phenotype and 3 | Negative modifiers in | [ |
| Less severe phenotype than expected by the | Type-II or -III phenotype and 2 | Positive modifiers in | [ |
| Unrelated patients with 3 | All three main types, mostly sitters or walkers | Different transcriptional equivalence of | [ |
| A haploidentical sibling less affected than his/her affected sibling or asymptomatic (with | Dissimilar achieved motor milestones or minimal manifestations or asymptomatic | Genetic/genomic/epigenetic modifiers | [ |
SMA spinal muscular atrophy