TY - JOUR
T1 - Hereditary Hyperekplexia: A New Family and a Systematic Review of GLRA1 Gene-Related Phenotypes
AU - Ferraroli, Elisabetta
AU - Perulli, Marco
AU - Veredice, Chiara
AU - Contaldo, Ilaria
AU - Quintiliani, Michela
AU - Ricci, Martina
AU - Venezia, Ilaria
AU - Citrigno, Luigi
AU - Qualtieri, Antonio
AU - Spadafora, Patrizia
AU - Cavalcanti, Francesca
AU - Battaglia, Domenica Immacolata
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Hereditary hyperekplexia (HPX) is a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder recently defined by the triad of (1) neonatal hypertonia, (2) excessive startle reflexes, and (3) generalized stiffness following the startle. Defects in GLRA1 are the most common cause of HPX, inherited both in an autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive manner. GLRA1 mutations can also cause milder phenotypes in the startle syndromes spectrum, but the prevalence is uncertain and no clear genotype-phenotype correlation has emerged yet. Moreover, the prevalence of neurodevelopmental outcomes has not been clearly defined. Here we report a new family of patients with a typical HPX phenotype, linked to a novel GLRA1 mutation, inherited with a recessive pattern. We then perform a systematic review of the literature of GLRA1related HPX, describing the main epidemiological features of 210 patients. We found that GLRA1-related phenotypes do not necessarily fulfill the current criteria for HPX, including also milder and later-onset phenotypes. Among clinical features of the disease, neurodevelopmental issues were reported in a third of the sample; interestingly, we found that these problems, particularly when severe, were more common in homozygous than in heterozygous patients. Additional clinical and preclinical studies are needed to define predictors of adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes and underlying mechanisms.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
AB - Hereditary hyperekplexia (HPX) is a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder recently defined by the triad of (1) neonatal hypertonia, (2) excessive startle reflexes, and (3) generalized stiffness following the startle. Defects in GLRA1 are the most common cause of HPX, inherited both in an autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive manner. GLRA1 mutations can also cause milder phenotypes in the startle syndromes spectrum, but the prevalence is uncertain and no clear genotype-phenotype correlation has emerged yet. Moreover, the prevalence of neurodevelopmental outcomes has not been clearly defined. Here we report a new family of patients with a typical HPX phenotype, linked to a novel GLRA1 mutation, inherited with a recessive pattern. We then perform a systematic review of the literature of GLRA1related HPX, describing the main epidemiological features of 210 patients. We found that GLRA1-related phenotypes do not necessarily fulfill the current criteria for HPX, including also milder and later-onset phenotypes. Among clinical features of the disease, neurodevelopmental issues were reported in a third of the sample; interestingly, we found that these problems, particularly when severe, were more common in homozygous than in heterozygous patients. Additional clinical and preclinical studies are needed to define predictors of adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes and underlying mechanisms.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
KW - GLRA1
KW - Genotype-phenotype
KW - Glycine
KW - Hyperekplexia
KW - Neurodevelopment
KW - Startle
KW - GLRA1
KW - Genotype-phenotype
KW - Glycine
KW - Hyperekplexia
KW - Neurodevelopment
KW - Startle
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/236574
U2 - 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2022.05.002
DO - 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2022.05.002
M3 - Article
SN - 0887-8994
VL - 132
SP - 45
EP - 49
JO - Pediatric Neurology
JF - Pediatric Neurology
ER -