| Literature DB >> 32276665 |
Pierre-François Pradat1, Emilien Bernard2, Philippe Corcia3, Philippe Couratier4, Christel Jublanc5, Giorgia Querin6, Capucine Morélot Panzini7,8, François Salachas9, Christophe Vial2, Karim Wahbi10, Peter Bede6,11, Claude Desnuelle12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Kennedy's disease (KD), also known as spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), is a rare, adult-onset, X-linked recessive neuromuscular disease caused by CAG expansions in exon 1 of the androgen receptor gene (AR). The objective of the French national diagnostic and management protocol is to provide evidence-based best practice recommendations and outline an optimised care pathway for patients with KD, based on a systematic literature review and consensus multidisciplinary observations.Entities:
Keywords: Androgen insensitivity; Androgen receptor; Guidelines; Kennedy disease; Polyglutamine; Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32276665 PMCID: PMC7149864 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-020-01366-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
A list of large descriptive case series of KD in the literature (non-exhaustive list)
| Author | Aim | Methodology, level of evidence | Population | evaluation parameters | Most significant results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dejager et al., 2002 [ | Description of endocrine and metabolic changes | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 22 KD | Gynecomastia, blood hormonal, lipid and glucose assessment | Gynecomastia in 73% of cases, infertility or decrease of testicular volume in 60%, elevation of total cholesterol, LDL-C and triglycerides (54, 40 and 48%, respectively). |
| Sperfeld et al., 2005 [ | Evaluation of the incidence of laryngospasm | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 49 KD | Symptom questionnaire, respiratory tests | 47% of the KD patients experienced laryngospasm. |
| Atsuta et al., 2006 [ | Description of the natural history of KD | Multicentre cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 223 KD | Clinical and biological parameters, Rankin score | Inverse correlation between the number of CAG repeats and the age of onset of symptoms |
| Chahin et al., 2008 [ | Evaluation of functional decline and prognosis | Single centre case-control study Level of evidence: III | 39 KD 70 Controls | 10-year survival rate and functional status (ALSFRS-R) at last follow-up | Survival rate of KD was not significantly altered compared with controls (82% vs 95%, |
| Rhodes et al., 2009 [ | Description of the natural history of KD | Single centre cohort study, patients participating in the Dudasteride therapeutic trial. Level of evidence: IV | 57 KD | Neurophysiological, biological, neuropsychological and quality of life parameters | Long diagnostic delay (5 years). Correlation between androgen levels and muscle strength. |
| Soukup et al., 2009 [ | Evaluation of cognition changes in KD | Monocentric case-control study Level of evidence: III | 20 KD 20 Controls | Neuropsychological assessment evaluating executive functions, memory, attention | Existence of a subclinical impairment of frontal and temporal functions |
| Hashizume [ | Characterisation of the natural history of KD | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 34 KD | Quantitative outcome measures including functional and blood parameters | Disease progression is not affected by CAG repeat length Objective motor functional tests such as the 6-min walk test and grip power or serum creatinine levels are more sensitive at an early stage than by the functional rating scales |
| Araki et al., 2014 [ | Evaluation of ECG abnormalities | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 144 KD | ECG parameters | ECG abnormalities in 49% of cases, mainly consisting in ST segment anomalies in V1-V3 (19%) and V5-V6 (18%). Brugada syndrome (12%) with two cases of sudden death |
| Querin et al., 2015 [ | Characterisation of the extraneurological profile of KD | Multicentre cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 73 KD | Biology, androgen sensitivity index, genito-urinary symptoms, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, muscle biopsy | Androgen insensitivity. Increased prevalence of genito-urinary symptoms and diminution of bone mass. |
| Bertolin et al., 2016 [ | Genotype-phenotype associations | Multicentre cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 159 KD | Correlation between the number of CAG repeats and motor function | No genotype/phenotype correlations |
| Nordenvall et al., 2016 [ | Establishing the incidence of hypospadias | Data analysis from a national KD registry Level of evidence: IV | 4 KD | Association between hypospadia and KD | Hypospadia in KD may be underestimated |
| Francini-Pesenti, 2018 [ | Evaluating the prevalence of metabolic syndrome | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 47 KD | Metabolic syndrome Insuline resistance Non-alcoholic liver disease | High prevalence of insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and non-alcoholic liver disease and NAFLD in SBMA patients |
| Rosenbohm et al., 2018 [ | Evaluating the prevalence of metabolic changes | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 80 KD | Panel of 28 laboratory parameters | Diabetes, hyperlipidemia and androgen insensitivity |
| Marcato et al., 2018 [ | Establishing the prevalence of cognitive changes | Monocentric cohort study Level of evidence: IV | 64 KD | Battery of neuropsychological test | Absence of neuropsychological abnormalities |
| Spinelli et al., 2019 [ | Characterising cerebral radiological alterations | Monocentric case-control study. Level of evidence: III | 25 KD 24 Healthy 25 ALS 35 Lower motor neuron-predominant conditions | MRI parameters: cortical thickness and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) | Absence of abnormalities of the cerebral gray and white matters in KD patients. |
Abbreviation: ECG electrocardiogram, ENMG electroneuromyogram, MRI magnetic resonance imaging
Differential diagnosis between ALS and KD. The interpretation of these simple criteria must be put in perspective with the phenotypic heterogeneity of these two pathologies and more particularly of ALS (adapted from Pradat, 2014)
| Sex and age | KD | ALS |
|---|---|---|
| Adult man in his thirties or forties | Adult man or woman in their fifties or sixties | |
| Genetic | X-linked transmission Family history found in 2/3 of the cases | Familial in 10% of cases (autosomal dominant, recessive, multigenic, exceptionally X-linked) |
Topography Predominance in LL vs UL Proximal vs distal | Symmetrical LL more affected Proximal predominance | Most often asymmetrical LL = UL Proximal = distal |
| Pyramidal syndrome | Absent | Present in most patients |
| Fasciculations | Lingual quasi constant lips, chin, or perioral area (often with a myokymic appearance). | Lingual frequent |
| Lingual atrophy | Present with a reshaped aspect | Present |
| Dysarthria and dysphagia | Moderate, contrasting with the severity of lingual atrophy and slowly progressive | Evolutive (frequent use of assistive devices for communication and enteral nutrition) |
| Pseudo-bulbar involvement | absent | possible |
| Cognitive involvement | Absent or very slight | Association with fronto-temporal dementia in 5–10% of the cases. |
| Respiratory insufficiency | Rare | Common |
| Progression | Slow Normal life expectancy | Rapid (but slow progressive forms) Median survival of 3 years |
| Gynecomastia | Frequent | Absente |
| ENMG | Chronic motor denervation associated with a decrease of sensory potentials | Motor denervation with frequent signs of activity (fibrillation) and normal sensory potentials |
| CPK | Important elevation | Elevation |
Abbreviations: CPK creatine phosphokinase enzyme, ENMG electroneuromyogram, LL lower limbs, UL upper limbs
Differential diagnosis of KD depending on the presentation and predominant signs and symptoms
| Clinical features | Differential diagnosis |
|---|---|
| Isolated damage to the peripheral motor neuron | - Other causes of spinal amyotrophy (particularly related to SMN1 mutation), - Spinal motor forms of Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy - Progressive muscular atrophy - Post-polio syndrome |
| Cramps and fasciculations | -"Benign” cramps-fasciculations syndrome - Isaacs syndrome |
| Progressive bulbar involvement: | - Myasthenia gravis - Congenital myopathies - Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy; |
| Proximal motor deficit associated with a rise in CPK | - Progressive muscular dystrophies - Congenital myopathies - Muscular canalopathies - Inflammatory or metabolic myopathies; |
| Amyotrophic motor deficit associated with sensory impairment | Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy |
Neurological signs suggestive of Kennedy’s disease
| Site of involvement | Neurological signs |
|---|---|
| Peripheral motor neuron involvement limited or diffused to the four limbs | - Fasciculations - Cramps - Amyotrophy - Predominant motor deficit in the lower and proximal limbs, - Decrease or abolition of osteo-tendinous reflexes |
| Progressive peripheral bulbar involvement | - Atrophy of the tongue and fasciculations that may extend to the lips, chin, or perioral area (often with a myokymic appearance). - Dysarthria, with potentially a discreet nasal voice - Dysphagia |
| Sensory involvement | - Most often subclinical and distal |
| Absence of evidence of central motor neuron involvement | - Absence of spasticity, clonus, exaggeration and / or diffusion of reflexes, or Babinski’s sign |
| Postural tremor of the upper limbs |
Levels of evidence according to the French Health Authority guidelines
| Level of evidence | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Level 1 | Comparative and randomised studies with appropriate statistical power Meta-analyses of randomised studies |
| Level 2 | Comparative and randomised studies with limited statistical power Non-randomised studies with high methodological value Cohort studies |
| Level 3 | Case-controls studies |
| Level 4 | Comparative studies with known bias (selection, inclusion, convenience sampling) Retrospective studies |
Fig. 1Development of the national Kennedy’s disease protocol
Specific themes reviewed and elaborated upon for the development of the French national KD protocol
| Scientific background | KD Management Protocol |
|---|---|
5.1.1 Motor and sensory signs and symptoms 5.1.2 Neuropsychological deficits 5.2.1 Endocrine abnormalities 5.2.2 Metabolic involvement 5.2.3 Bone involvement 5.2.4 Cardiac involvement 5.2.5 Genitourinary disorders 5.3.1 Muscle biopsy 5.3.2 Biology 5.3.3 Imaging | 1.1. Diagnosis and initial evaluation 1.2. Professionals involved 1.3. Clinical cues 1.4. Neurologic signs and symptoms 1.5. Extra-neurological signs and symptoms 1.6. Confirmation of the diagnosis 1.6.1. Electrophysiology (EMG/NCS) 1.6.2. Genetic confirmation 1.6.3. Differential diagnoses 1.7. The announcement of the diagnosis and patient information 1.8. Evaluation of severity of disease, screening for KD-associated comorbidities 1.9. The evaluation of neurological signs 1.10. Respiratory and nutritional assessment 1.11. Endocrine and metabolic evaluation 1.12. Cardiac evaluation 1.13. Bone health assessment 1.14. Genitourinary evaluation 1.15. Genetic counselling 2.1. General objectives 2.2. Professionals involved 2.3. Therapeutic management 2.3.1. pharmacological treatment 2.3.2. non-pharmacological interventions 2.4. Pharmacological treatments for pain 2.5. Treatment of fatigue and mood disorders 2.6. Endocrine and metabolic management 2.7. Rehabilitation 2.8. Nutritional management 2.9. Respiratory management 2.10 Cardiac management 3.1. General objectives 3.2. The multidisciplinary team 3.3. Clinical follow-up 3.4. Health care professional follow-up |