Clinicoradiologic data of familial cerebral cavernous malformation with age‐related disease burden

Author:

Kim Seondeuk123ORCID,Moon Jangsup1234ORCID,Jung Keun‐Hwa123ORCID,Ahn Seon‐Jae1235ORCID,Lee Han Sang1235,Jang Yoonhyuk13,Park Kyung‐Il1236ORCID,Lee Sang Kun123ORCID,Chu Kon123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Seoul National University Hospital Seoul South Korea

2. Program in Neuroscience Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea

3. Laboratory for Neurotherapeutics, Center for Medical Innovation Biomedical Research Institute, Seoul National University Hospital Seoul South Korea

4. Department of Genomic Medicine Seoul National University Hospital Seoul South Korea

5. Hospital Medicine Center Seoul National University Hospital Seoul South Korea

6. Department of Neurology Seoul National University Hospital Healthcare System Gangnam Center Seoul 152, Teheran‐ro, Gangnam‐gu Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveFamilial cerebral cavernous malformation (FCCM) is an autosomal dominant disease induced by loss‐of‐function mutations in three CCM genes, KRIT1, CCM2, and PDCD10. However, previous studies paid little attention to analyzing the radiologic features and age‐related disease burden according to the genes. Therefore, we retrospectively reviewed the genetic tests of our center's clinical FCCM patients.MethodThis study investigated clinical FCCM patients with multiple lesions or a family history of CCMs who underwent the FCCM gene (KRTI1, CCM2, and PDCD10) panel test. The clinical, genetic, and radiologic features were analyzed.ResultAmong the patients (n = 34) undergoing the FCCM gene test, twenty‐seven patients had CCM confirmed by brain MRI, and twenty‐one patients were considered to have FCCM (cohort 1). In cohort 1, thirteen patients had mutations in the FCCM gene, but eight did not. Cohort 2 comprised cohort 1 and four family members with the same mutation as the probands. Six novel variants in CCM genes were detected (KRIT1 c.22_26del, c.815dup, c.1094_1098del, c.1147‐2A>G, c.2124dup, and PDCD10 c.150 + 1dup). Cohort 1 demonstrated that brainstem lesions were mostly associated with the mutation detection in CCM genes (brainstem, lateral temporal, and parietal lesions vs. lateral temporal and parietal lesions, AUC 0.928 vs. 0.779, P = 0.0389). The radiologic severity worsened according to age in the KRIT1 group compared with the Mutation not detected group (correlation coefficient 0.75 (P < 0.001) versus 0.53 (P = 0.004)).ConclusionThe brainstem lesion could be the radiologic marker for FCCM with the mutation detected. The age‐related disease burden regarding FCCM according to genetic information was demonstrated.

Funder

Seoul National University Hospital

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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