Absence of the RNF213 p.R4810K variant may indicate a severe form of pediatric moyamoya disease in Japanese patients

Author:

Hara Shoko1,Mukawa Maki1,Akagawa Hiroyuki23,Thamamongood Thiparpa1,Inaji Motoki1,Tanaka Yoji1,Maehara Taketoshi1,Kasuya Hidetoshi23,Nariai Tadashi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo;

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Women’s Medical University Institute for Integrated Medical Sciences, Tokyo; and

3. Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Women’s Medical University Medical Center East, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The authors’ objective was to investigate the influence of the RNF213 p.R4810K variant on the clinical presentation and outcomes of Japanese pediatric patients with moyamoya disease. METHODS A total of 129 Japanese patients with pediatric-onset moyamoya disease (onset age ≤ 15 years) who visited the authors’ department from 2012 to 2020 participated in this study. After RNF213 p.R4810K genotyping of each patient was performed, the relationship between genotype and clinical presentation or outcomes, including onset age, initial presentation, surgical outcomes, and subsequent cerebrovascular events, was evaluated. Patients without the p.R4810K variant were tested for RNF213 variants other than p.R4810K. The authors especially focused on the results of patients who presented with moyamoya disease at younger than 1 year of age (infantile onset). RESULTS Compared with the patients with heterozygous variants, patients without the p.R4810K variant were younger at onset (7.1 ± 3.7 vs 4.4 ± 0.9 years), and all 4 patients with infantile onset lacked the p.R4810K variant. A greater proportion of patients without the p.R4810K variant presented with infarction than patients with the heterozygous variant (24.0% vs 7.6%) and a decreased proportion presented with transient ischemic attack (36.0% vs 71.7%). No significant correlation was observed between p.R4810K genotype and clinical outcomes, including surgical outcomes and subsequent cerebrovascular events; however, a decreased proportion of patients without the p.R4810K variant had good surgical outcomes compared with that of patients with the heterozygous variant (76.5% vs 92.2%). Among the 25 patients without the p.R4810K variant, 8 rare variants other than p.R4810K were identified. Three of 4 patients with infantile onset had RNF213 variants other than p.R4810K, which had a more severe functional effect on this gene than p.R4810K. CONCLUSIONS Absence of the RNF213 p.R4810K variant may be a novel biomarker for identification of a severe form of pediatric moyamoya disease.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference66 articles.

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