Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease

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Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease. / Holzwarth, Johanna; Minopoli, Nadja; Pfrimmer, Charlotte; Smitka, Martin; Borrel, Sabine; Kirschner, Janbernd; Muschol, Nicole; Hartmann, Hans; Hennermann, Julia B; Neubauer, Bernd A; Hobbiebrunken, Elke; Husain, Ralf; Hahn, Andreas.

in: NEUROPEDIATRICS, Jahrgang 53, Nr. 1, 02.2022, S. 39-45.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Holzwarth, J, Minopoli, N, Pfrimmer, C, Smitka, M, Borrel, S, Kirschner, J, Muschol, N, Hartmann, H, Hennermann, JB, Neubauer, BA, Hobbiebrunken, E, Husain, R & Hahn, A 2022, 'Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease', NEUROPEDIATRICS, Jg. 53, Nr. 1, S. 39-45. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1735250

APA

Holzwarth, J., Minopoli, N., Pfrimmer, C., Smitka, M., Borrel, S., Kirschner, J., Muschol, N., Hartmann, H., Hennermann, J. B., Neubauer, B. A., Hobbiebrunken, E., Husain, R., & Hahn, A. (2022). Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease. NEUROPEDIATRICS, 53(1), 39-45. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1735250

Vancouver

Holzwarth J, Minopoli N, Pfrimmer C, Smitka M, Borrel S, Kirschner J et al. Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease. NEUROPEDIATRICS. 2022 Feb;53(1):39-45. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0041-1735250

Bibtex

@article{477c588c814448769dc1b400c2f0196f,
title = "Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease",
abstract = "Little is known about clinical symptomatology and genetics of juvenile onset Pompe disease (JOPD). The aims of this study were to analyze how these children are diagnosed, what clinical problems they have, and how phenotype is related to genotype. To accomplish this, we analyzed retrospectively data of 34 patients diagnosed after their first and before completion of their 18th birthday. Median age at diagnosis was 3.9 (range 1.1-17) years. Eight patients (23.5%) developed initial symptoms in the first year, 12 (35%) between 1 and 7 years, and 6 (18%) thereafter. Eight (23.5%) had no clinical symptoms at the time of diagnosis. Indications for diagnostics were a positive family history in three (9%), hyperCKemia in eight (23.5%), motor developmental delay in three (9%), and muscle weakness and/or pain in 17 (50%). Rare clinical signs were failure to thrive, recurrent diarrhea, and suspected hepatopathy with glycogen storage. Thirty-two different mutations were identified. Twenty-seven patients (79.5%) carried the milder c.32-13T > G mutation, known to be associated with a broad range of phenotypes. Three out of eight patients manifesting within the first year of life showed generalized muscle weakness, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and had to be ventilated during the course of disease, thereby demonstrating clinical overlap with infantile onset Pompe disease.These findings demonstrate that the phenotype of JOPD is broad and that the differential is not only restricted to neuromuscular disorders. Genotypic analysis was useful to delineate subjects with early onset JOPD from those with IOPD, but overall genotype-phenotype correlation was poor.",
author = "Johanna Holzwarth and Nadja Minopoli and Charlotte Pfrimmer and Martin Smitka and Sabine Borrel and Janbernd Kirschner and Nicole Muschol and Hans Hartmann and Hennermann, {Julia B} and Neubauer, {Bernd A} and Elke Hobbiebrunken and Ralf Husain and Andreas Hahn",
note = "Thieme. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1055/s-0041-1735250",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
pages = "39--45",
journal = "NEUROPEDIATRICS",
issn = "0174-304X",
publisher = "Hippokrates Verlag GmbH",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Clinical and Genetic Aspects of Juvenile Onset Pompe Disease

AU - Holzwarth, Johanna

AU - Minopoli, Nadja

AU - Pfrimmer, Charlotte

AU - Smitka, Martin

AU - Borrel, Sabine

AU - Kirschner, Janbernd

AU - Muschol, Nicole

AU - Hartmann, Hans

AU - Hennermann, Julia B

AU - Neubauer, Bernd A

AU - Hobbiebrunken, Elke

AU - Husain, Ralf

AU - Hahn, Andreas

N1 - Thieme. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022/2

Y1 - 2022/2

N2 - Little is known about clinical symptomatology and genetics of juvenile onset Pompe disease (JOPD). The aims of this study were to analyze how these children are diagnosed, what clinical problems they have, and how phenotype is related to genotype. To accomplish this, we analyzed retrospectively data of 34 patients diagnosed after their first and before completion of their 18th birthday. Median age at diagnosis was 3.9 (range 1.1-17) years. Eight patients (23.5%) developed initial symptoms in the first year, 12 (35%) between 1 and 7 years, and 6 (18%) thereafter. Eight (23.5%) had no clinical symptoms at the time of diagnosis. Indications for diagnostics were a positive family history in three (9%), hyperCKemia in eight (23.5%), motor developmental delay in three (9%), and muscle weakness and/or pain in 17 (50%). Rare clinical signs were failure to thrive, recurrent diarrhea, and suspected hepatopathy with glycogen storage. Thirty-two different mutations were identified. Twenty-seven patients (79.5%) carried the milder c.32-13T > G mutation, known to be associated with a broad range of phenotypes. Three out of eight patients manifesting within the first year of life showed generalized muscle weakness, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and had to be ventilated during the course of disease, thereby demonstrating clinical overlap with infantile onset Pompe disease.These findings demonstrate that the phenotype of JOPD is broad and that the differential is not only restricted to neuromuscular disorders. Genotypic analysis was useful to delineate subjects with early onset JOPD from those with IOPD, but overall genotype-phenotype correlation was poor.

AB - Little is known about clinical symptomatology and genetics of juvenile onset Pompe disease (JOPD). The aims of this study were to analyze how these children are diagnosed, what clinical problems they have, and how phenotype is related to genotype. To accomplish this, we analyzed retrospectively data of 34 patients diagnosed after their first and before completion of their 18th birthday. Median age at diagnosis was 3.9 (range 1.1-17) years. Eight patients (23.5%) developed initial symptoms in the first year, 12 (35%) between 1 and 7 years, and 6 (18%) thereafter. Eight (23.5%) had no clinical symptoms at the time of diagnosis. Indications for diagnostics were a positive family history in three (9%), hyperCKemia in eight (23.5%), motor developmental delay in three (9%), and muscle weakness and/or pain in 17 (50%). Rare clinical signs were failure to thrive, recurrent diarrhea, and suspected hepatopathy with glycogen storage. Thirty-two different mutations were identified. Twenty-seven patients (79.5%) carried the milder c.32-13T > G mutation, known to be associated with a broad range of phenotypes. Three out of eight patients manifesting within the first year of life showed generalized muscle weakness, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and had to be ventilated during the course of disease, thereby demonstrating clinical overlap with infantile onset Pompe disease.These findings demonstrate that the phenotype of JOPD is broad and that the differential is not only restricted to neuromuscular disorders. Genotypic analysis was useful to delineate subjects with early onset JOPD from those with IOPD, but overall genotype-phenotype correlation was poor.

U2 - 10.1055/s-0041-1735250

DO - 10.1055/s-0041-1735250

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 34852371

VL - 53

SP - 39

EP - 45

JO - NEUROPEDIATRICS

JF - NEUROPEDIATRICS

SN - 0174-304X

IS - 1

ER -