학술논문

Biallelic RFC1-expansion in a French multicentric sporadic ataxia cohort.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neurology. Sep2021, Vol. 268 Issue 9, p3337-3343. 7p.
Subject
*SPINOCEREBELLAR ataxia
*CEREBELLUM degeneration
*ATAXIA
*MULTIPLE system atrophy
*CEREBELLAR ataxia
*PHENOTYPES
Language
ISSN
0340-5354
Abstract
Objective: Cerebellar ataxia with neuropathy and vestibular areflexia syndrome (CANVAS) is a recessively inherited multisystem ataxia compromising cerebellar, vestibular, and sensory nerves, which has been associated to a pathogenic AAGGG(n) biallelic expansion repeat in the RFC1 gene. Our objective was to assess its prevalence in a French cohort of patients with idiopathic sporadic late-onset ataxia (ILOA), idiopathic early-onset ataxia (IEOA), or Multiple System Atrophy of Cerebellar type (MSA-C). Methods: 163 patients were recruited in 3 French tertiary centers: 100 ILOA, 21 IEOA, and 42 patients with possible or probable MSA-C. Results: A pathogenic biallelic RFC1 AAGGG(n) repeat expansion was found in 15 patients: 15/100 in the ILOA group, but none in the IEOA and MSA-C subgroups. 14/15 patients had a CANVAS phenotype. Only 1/15 had isolated cerebellar ataxia, but also shorter biallelic expansions. Two RFC1 AAGGG(n) alleles were found in 78% of patients with a CANVAS phenotype. In one post-mortem case, the pathophysiological involvement of cerebellum and medullar posterior columns was found. Conclusion: Our study confirms the genetic heterogeneity of the CANVAS and that RFC1 repeat expansions should be searched for preferentially in case of unexplained ILOA associated with a sensory neuronopathy, but not particularly in patients classified as MSA-C. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]