CDK13-related disorder: a deep characterization of speech and language abilities and addition of 33 novel cases

Author:

Morgan Angela1ORCID,Morison Lottie1ORCID,Reyk Olivia van1,Forbes Elana,Rouxel Flavien2,Faivre Laurence3,Bruinsma Fiona,Vincent Marie4ORCID,Jacquemont Marie-Line,Dykzeul Natalie,Geneviève David5ORCID,Amor David6

Affiliation:

1. Murdoch Children's Research Institute

2. CHU de Montpellier

3. Hôpital d'Enfants, CHU et Université de Bourgogne

4. CHU Nantes

5. Centre de Reference Maladies Rares Anomalies du developpement, Hopital Arnaud de Villeneuve

6. Murdoch Children’s Research Institute

Abstract

Abstract Speech and language impairments are central features of CDK13-related disorder. While pathogenic CDK13 variants have been associated with childhood apraxia of speech (CAS), a systematic characterisation of communication has not been conducted. Here we examined speech, language, non-verbal communication skills, social behaviour and health and development in 41 individuals with CDK-13 related disorder (male = 22, median-age 7 years 1 month, range 1–25 years; 33 novel). Most participants used augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) in early childhood (24/41). CAS was common (14/22). Performance varied widely across intellectual ability, social behaviour and expressive language skills, with participants ranging from within average through to the severely impaired range. Receptive language was significantly stronger than expressive language ability. Social motivation was a relative strength. In terms of broader phenotype, a quarter had one or more of: renal, urogenital, musculoskeletal and cardiac malformations, vision impairment, ear infections and/or sleep disturbance. All had gross and fine motor impairments (41/41). Other conditions included mild-moderate intellectual disability (16/22) and autism (7/41). No genotype-phenotype correlations were found. Recognition of CAS, a rare speech disorder, is required to ensure appropriately targeted therapy. The high prevalence of speech and language impairment underscores the importance of tailored speech therapy, particularly early access to AAC supports.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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