No abstract
Objective ANO5‐related myopathy is an important cause of limb‐girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) and hyperCKemia. The main descriptions have emerged from European cohorts, and the burden of the disease worldwide is unclear. We provide a detailed characterization of a large Brazilian cohort of ANO5 patients. Methods A national cross‐sectional study was conducted to describe clinical, histopathological, radiological, and molecular features of patients carrying recessive variants in ANO5. Correlation of clinical and genetic characteristics with different phenotypes was studied. Results Thirty‐seven patients from 34 nonrelated families with recessive mutations of ANO5 were identified. The most common phenotype was LGMD, observed in 25 (67.5%) patients, followed by pseudometabolic presentation in 7 (18.9%) patients, isolated asymptomatic hyperCKemia in 4 (10.8%) patients, and distal myopathy in a single patient. Nine patients presented axial involvement, including one patient with isolated axial weakness. The most affected muscles according to MRI were the semimembranosus and gastrocnemius, but paraspinal and abdominal muscles, when studied, were involved in most patients. Fourteen variants in ANO5 were identified, and the c.191dupA was present in 19 (56%) families. Sex, years of disease, and the presence of loss‐of‐function variants were not associated with specific phenotypes. Interpretation We present the largest series of anoctaminopathy outside Europe. The most common European founder mutation c.191dupA was very frequent in our population. Gender, disease duration, and genotype did not determine the phenotype.
Limb‐girdle muscular dystrophies (LGMD) are a group of genetically heterogeneous disorders characterized by predominantly proximal muscle weakness. We aimed to characterize epidemiological, clinical and molecular data of patients with autosomal recessive LGMD2/LGMD‐R in Brazil. A multicenter historical cohort study was performed at 13 centers, in which index cases and their affected relatives' data from consecutive families with genetic or pathological diagnosis of LGMD2/LGMD‐R were reviewed from July 2017 to August 2018. Survival curves to major handicap for LGMD2A/LGMD‐R1‐calpain3‐related, LGMD2B/LGMD‐R2‐dysferlin‐related and sarcoglycanopathies were built and progressions according to sex and genotype were estimated. In 370 patients (305 families) with LGMD2/LGMD‐R, most frequent subtypes were LGMD2A/LGMD‐R1‐calpain3‐related and LGMD2B/LGMD‐R2‐dysferlin‐related, each representing around 30% of families. Sarcoglycanopathies were the most frequent childhood‐onset subtype, representing 21% of families. Five percent of families had LGMD2G/LGMD‐R7‐telethonin‐related, an ultra‐rare subtype worldwide. Females with LGMD2B/LGMD‐R2‐dysferlin‐related had less severe progression to handicap than males and LGMD2A/LGMD‐R1‐calpain3‐related patients with truncating variants had earlier disease onset and more severe progression to handicap than patients without truncating variants. We have provided paramount epidemiological data of LGMD2/LGMD‐R in Brazil that might help on differential diagnosis, better patient care and guiding future collaborative clinical trials and natural history studies in the field.
Significant advances in the understanding and management of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) took place since international guidelines were published in 2010. Our objective was to provide an evidence-based national consensus statement for multidisciplinary care of DMD in Brazil. A combination of the Delphi technique with a systematic review of studies from 2010 to 2016 was employed to classify evidence levels and grade of recommendations. Our recommendations were divided in two parts. We present Part 1 here, where we describe the guideline methodology and overall disease concepts, and also provide recommendations on diagnosis, steroid therapy and new drug treatment perspectives for DMD. The main recommendations: 1) genetic testing in diagnostic suspicious cases should be the first line for diagnostic confirmation; 2) patients diagnosed with DMD should have steroids prescribed; 3) lack of published results for phase 3 clinical trials hinders, for now, the recommendation to use exon skipping or read-through agents.Keywords: muscular dystrophy, Duchenne; practice guideline; consensus; diagnosis; genetic testing; drug therapy; glucocorticoids; utrophin. RESUMOAvanços na compreensão e no manejo da distrofia muscular de Duchenne (DMD) ocorreram desde a publicação de diretrizes internacionais em 2010. Nosso objetivo foi elaborar um consenso nacional baseado em evidências de cuidado multidisciplinar dos pacientes com DMD no Brasil. Utilizamos a técnica de Delphi combinada com revisão sistemática da literatura de 2010 a 2016 classificando níveis de evidência e graus de recomendação. Nossas recomendações foram divididas em duas partes. Apresentamos aqui a parte 1, descrevendo a metodologia utilizada e conceitos gerais da doença, e fornecemos recomendações sobre diagnóstico, tratamento com corticosteroides e novas perspectivas de tratamentos medicamentosos. As principais recomendações: 1) testes genéticos deveriam ser a primeira linha para confirmação de casos suspeitos; 2) pacientes com diagnóstico de DMD devem receber corticosteroides; 3) por enquanto, a falta de publicações de resultados dos ensaios clínicos de fase 3, dificulta recomendações de uso medicamentos que "saltam exons" ou "passam" por código de parada prematura.
This study aimed to describe the clinical, genetic, and epidemiological features of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) in Brazilian patients from a tertiary center, and to compare our data with previously published findings. This retrospective observational study conducted between February 2015 and July 2020 evaluated 503 patients (94 families and 192 unrelated individuals), diagnosed with CMT. Clinical and neurophysiological data were obtained from electronic medical records and blood samples were used for genetic analyses. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification was used to assess duplications/deletions in PMP22. Sanger sequencing of GJB1 was performed in cases of suspected demyelinating CMT. Targeted gene panel sequencing was used for the remaining negative demyelinating cases and all axonal CMT cases. The first decade of life was the most common period of disease onset. In all, 353 patients had demyelinating CMT, 39 had intermediate CMT, and 111 had axonal CMT. Pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants were identified in 197 index cases.The most common causative genes among probands were PMP22 (duplication) (n = 116, 58.88%), GJB1 (n = 23, 11.67%), MFN2 (n = 12, 6.09%), GDAP1 (n = 7, 3.55%), MPZ (n = 6, 3.05%), PMP22 (point mutation) (n = 6, 3.05%), NEFL (n = 3, 1.52%), SBF2 (n = 3, 1.52%), and SH3TC2 (n = 3, 1.52%). Other identified variants were ≤1% of index cases. This study provides further data on the frequency of CMT subtypes in a Brazilian clinical-based population and highlights the importance of rarer and previously undiagnosed variants in clinical practice.
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