Author:
Panosyan Francis B.,Laura Matilde,Rossor Alexander M.,Pisciotta Chiara,Piscosquito Giuseppe,Burns Joshua,Li Jun,Yum Sabrina W.,Lewis Richard A.,Day John,Horvath Rita,Herrmann David N.,Shy Michael E.,Pareyson Davide,Reilly Mary M.,Scherer Steven S.,
Abstract
Objective:To extend the phenotypic description of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTX1) and to draw new genotype-phenotype relationships.Methods:Mutations in GJB1 cause the main X-linked form of CMTX (CMTX1). We report cross-sectional data from 160 patients (from 120 different families, with 89 different mutations) seen at the Inherited Neuropathies Consortium centers.Results:We evaluated 87 males who had a mean age of 41 years (range 10–78 years) and 73 females who had a mean age of 46 years (range 15–84 years). Sensory-motor polyneuropathy affects both sexes, more severely in males than in females, and there was a strong correlation between age and disease burden in males but not in females. Compared with females, males had more severe reduction in motor and sensory neurophysiology parameters. In contrast to females, the radial nerve sensory response in older males tended to be more severely affected compared with younger males. Median and ulnar nerve motor amplitudes were also more severely affected in older males, whereas ulnar nerve motor potentials tended to be more affected in older females. Conversely, there were no statistical differences between the sexes in other features of the disease, such as problems with balance and hand dexterity.Conclusions:In the absence of a phenotypic correlation with specific GJB1 mutations, sex-specific distinctions and clinically relevant attributes need to be incorporated into the measurements for clinical trials in people with CMTX1.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier:NCT01193075.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
41 articles.
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