Higher Prevalence of Nonsense Pathogenic DMD Variants in a Single-Center Cohort from Brazil: A Genetic Profile Study That May Guide the Choice of Disease-Modifying Treatments
Vitor Lucas Lopes Braga,
Danielle Pessoa Lima,
Tamiris Carneiro Mariano
et al.
Abstract:Dystrophinopathies are muscle diseases caused by pathogenic variants in DMD, the largest gene described in humans, representing a spectrum of diseases ranging from asymptomatic creatine phosphokinase elevation to severe Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Several therapeutic strategies are currently in use or under development, each targeting different pathogenic variants. However, little is known about the genetic profiles of northeast Brazilian patients with dystrophinopathies. We describe the spectrum of pat… Show more
“…Regarding potentially treatable disorders, Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most common neuromuscular disease in humans, and some causative pathogenic variants offer the possibility of targeted treatment. Braga and colleagues describe a large single-center cohort of DMD patients with a higher frequency of treatment-amenable variants [7]. Finally, some conditions bridge the gap between autoimmune and genetic disease in both children and adults.…”
This Special Issue assembles papers that highlight different types of neurogenetic disorders that occur throughout human life, from childhood to adulthood, focusing on their natural history, epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment approaches [...]
“…Regarding potentially treatable disorders, Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most common neuromuscular disease in humans, and some causative pathogenic variants offer the possibility of targeted treatment. Braga and colleagues describe a large single-center cohort of DMD patients with a higher frequency of treatment-amenable variants [7]. Finally, some conditions bridge the gap between autoimmune and genetic disease in both children and adults.…”
This Special Issue assembles papers that highlight different types of neurogenetic disorders that occur throughout human life, from childhood to adulthood, focusing on their natural history, epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment approaches [...]
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