Umoh Mfon E, Fournier Christina, Li Yingjie, Polak Meraida, Shaw Latoya, Landers John E, Hu William, Gearing Marla, Glass Jonathan D
From the Center for Neurodegenerative Disease (M.E.U., W.H., M.G., J.D.G.), Department of Neurology (M.E.U., C.F., Y.L., M.P., L.S., W.H., M.G., J.D.G.), and Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (M.G., J.D.G.), Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA; and the Department of Neurology (J.E.L.), University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester.
Neurology. 2016 Sep 6;87(10):1024-30. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000003067. Epub 2016 Aug 3.
We investigated whether the C9orf72 expansion mutation in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is associated with unique demographic and clinical features.
Between 2001 and 2015, approximately half of all patients attending the Emory ALS Clinic agreed to donate DNA for research. This research cohort of 781 patients was screened for the C9orf72 expansion, and demographic and clinical data were compared between those with and without the C9orf72 mutation. For mutation carriers without a family history of ALS, we sought further family history of dementia and other non-ALS neurodegenerative diseases in first-degree relatives.
The C9orf72 expansion was identified in 61 patients (7.8%). Compared to those without the expansion mutation, these patients did not differ in race, age, or site of onset. As expected, C9orf72 patients were more likely to have a family history of ALS (59% vs 7.9%) and to present with comorbid frontotemporal dementia (FTD) (14.8% vs 1.7%). Survival was shorter in patients with the expansion (log-rank χ(2)[1] = 45.323, p < 0.001). Further investigation in 28 patients initially categorized as having no known family history of ALS identified a family history of dementia in 16 cases; 6 of these had characteristics suggestive of FTD.
Comparing the C9orf72 ALS population to the general ALS population, there were no differences in race, age at onset, or proportion of patients with bulbar onset disease. Differences identified in patients with the C9orf72 mutation included shortened survival and an equal proportion of men and women. In addition, we found that assessing family history for dementia may identify other family members likely to be carrying the C9orf72 expansion, reduce the number of sporadic cases, and thus increase our understanding of disease penetrance.
我们研究了肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)患者中C9orf72基因扩增突变是否与独特的人口统计学和临床特征相关。
2001年至2015年间,埃默里ALS诊所约一半的患者同意捐赠DNA用于研究。对这781例患者的研究队列进行C9orf72基因扩增筛查,并比较有无C9orf72突变患者的人口统计学和临床数据。对于无ALS家族史的突变携带者,我们进一步探寻其一级亲属中痴呆及其他非ALS神经退行性疾病的家族史。
61例患者(7.8%)检测到C9orf72基因扩增。与无扩增突变的患者相比,这些患者在种族、年龄或发病部位上无差异。正如预期的那样,携带C9orf72基因的患者更可能有ALS家族史(59%对7.9%),并伴有共病性额颞叶痴呆(FTD)(14.8%对1.7%)。基因扩增患者的生存期较短(对数秩检验χ(2)[1]=45.323,p<0.001)。对最初归类为无已知ALS家族史的28例患者进一步调查发现,16例有痴呆家族史;其中6例具有提示FTD的特征。
将携带C9orf72基因的ALS患者群体与一般ALS患者群体进行比较,在种族、发病年龄或延髓发病疾病患者比例方面无差异。携带C9orf72突变的患者的差异包括生存期缩短以及男女比例相同。此外,我们发现评估痴呆家族史可能会识别出其他可能携带C9orf72基因扩增的家庭成员,减少散发病例数量,从而增进我们对疾病外显率的理解。