Clinical profile of patients with ATP1A3 mutations in Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood—a study of 155 patients

  • Eleni Panagiotakaki (Creator)
  • Elisa De Grandis (Contributor)
  • Michela Stagnaro (Creator)
  • Erin L Heinzen (Creator)
  • Carmen Fons (Creator)
  • Sanjay Sisodiya (Creator)
  • Boukje De Vries (Contributor)
  • Christophe Goubau (Creator)
  • Sarah Weckhuysen (Creator)
  • David Kemlink (Creator)
  • Ingrid Scheffer (Creator)
  • Gaetan Lesca (Creator)
  • Muriel Rabilloud (Creator)
  • Amna Klich (Contributor)
  • Alia Ramirez-Camacho (Creator)
  • Adriana Ulate-Campos (Creator)
  • Jaume Campistol (Creator)
  • Melania Giannotta (Creator)
  • Marie-Laure Moutard (Contributor)
  • Diane Doummar (Creator)
  • Cecile Hubsch-Bonneaud (Creator)
  • Fatima Jaffer (Creator)
  • Helen Cross (Creator)
  • Fiorella Gurrieri (Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS) (Creator)
  • Francesco Danilo Tiziano (Creator)
  • Sona Nevsimalova (Creator)
  • Sophie Nicole (Creator)
  • Brian Neville (Creator)
  • Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg (Contributor)
  • Mohamad Mikati (Creator)
  • David B. Goldstein (Creator)
  • Rosaria Vavassori (Creator)
  • Alexis Arzimanoglou (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Abstract Background Mutations in the gene ATP1A3 have recently been identified to be prevalent in patients with alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC2). Based on a large series of patients with AHC, we set out to identify the spectrum of different mutations within the ATP1A3 gene and further establish any correlation with phenotype. Methods Clinical data from an international cohort of 155 AHC patients (84 females, 71 males; between 3 months and 52 years) were gathered using a specifically formulated questionnaire and analysed relative to the mutational ATP1A3 gene data for each patient. Results In total, 34 different ATP1A3 mutations were detected in 85 % (132/155) patients, seven of which were novel. In general, mutations were found to cluster into five different regions. The most frequent mutations included: p.Asp801Asn (43 %; 57/132), p.Glu815Lys (16 %; 22/132), and p.Gly947Arg (11 %; 15/132). Of these, p.Glu815Lys was associated with a severe phenotype, with more severe intellectual and motor disability. p.Asp801Asn appeared to confer a milder phenotypic expression, and p.Gly947Arg appeared to correlate with the most favourable prognosis, compared to the other two frequent mutations. Overall, the comparison of the clinical profiles suggested a gradient of severity between the three major mutations with differences in intellectual (p = 0.029) and motor (p = 0.039) disabilities being statistically significant. For patients with epilepsy, age at onset of seizures was earlier for patients with either p.Glu815Lys or p.Gly947Arg mutation, compared to those with p.Asp801Asn mutation (p 
Dati resi disponibili2015
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