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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Clinical and Molecular Spectrum of GM1 Gangliosidosis

Katalin KomlósiSkadi BebloMartin SmitkaYasmina AmraouiEduard PaschkeLaila Arash-kapsStefan DiederichMarlene SeegräberJulia B. HennermannAndrea Dieckmann

subject

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyMovement disordersAdolescentGenotypeUrinary systemDNA Mutational AnalysisDiseaseGastroenterologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGermany030225 pediatricsInternal medicineGenotypemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineChildRetrospective StudiesDystoniaGangliosidosis GM1Coarse facial featuresbusiness.industryIncidenceInfantDNAbeta-Galactosidasemedicine.diseaseDysphagiaPhenotypeAustriaChild PreschoolMutationPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthATP-Binding Cassette TransportersFemalemedicine.symptombusinessVisceromegalyFollow-Up Studies

description

Objective To evaluate the clinical presentation of patients with GM1 gangliosidosis and to determine whether specific clinical or biochemical signs could lead to a prompt diagnosis. Study design We retrospectively analyzed clinical, biochemical, and genetic data of 22 patients with GM1 gangliosidosis from 5 metabolic centers in Germany and Austria. Results Eight patients were classified as infantile, 11 as late-infantile, and 3 as juvenile form. Delay of diagnosis was 6 ± 2.6 months in the infantile, 2.6 ± 3.79 years in the late-infantile, and 14 ± 3.48 years in the juvenile form. Coarse facial features, cherry red spots, and visceromegaly occurred only in patients with the infantile form. Patients with the late-infantile and juvenile forms presented with variable neurologic symptoms. Seventeen patients presented with dystonia and 14 with dysphagia. Laboratory analysis revealed an increased ASAT concentration (13/20), chitotriosidase activity (12/15), and pathologic urinary oligosaccharides (10/19). Genotype analyses revealed 23 causative or likely causative mutations in 19 patients, 7 of them being novel variants. In the majority, a clear genotype–phenotype correlation was found. Conclusions Diagnosis of GM1 gangliosidosis often is delayed, especially in patients with milder forms of the disease. GM1 gangliosidosis should be considered in patients with progressive neurodegeneration and spastic-dystonic movement disorders, even in the absence of visceral symptoms or cherry red spots. ASAT serum concentrations and chitotriosidase activity may be of value in screening for GM1 gangliosidosis.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2019.08.016