Prevalence of Pompe disease in 3,076 patients with hyperCKemia and limb-girdle muscular weakness

  • Zoltan Lukacs
  • Paulina Nieves Cobos
  • Stephan Wenninger
  • Tracey A Willis
  • Michela Guglieri
  • Marc Roberts
  • Rosaline Quinlivan
  • David Hilton-Jones
  • Teresinha Evangelista
  • Stephan Zierz
  • Beate Schlotter-Weigel
  • Maggie C Walter
  • Peter Reilich
  • Thomas Klopstock
  • Marcus Deschauer
  • Volker Straub
  • Wolfgang Müller-Felber
  • Benedikt Schoser

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We prospectively screened a large European cohort of patients presenting with hyperCKemia and/or limb-girdle muscular weakness (LGMW) for acid α-glucosidase (GAA) deficiency by dried blood spot (DBS) investigation.

METHODS: DBS were collected from 3,076 consecutive adult patients from 7 German and British neuromuscular centers. All specimens were investigated for GAA deficiency by fluorometry. Samples with reduced enzyme activity were subsequently investigated for GAA gene mutations.

RESULTS: Of 3,076 patients with DBS samples, 232 patients (7.6%) showed low GAA enzyme activity. Of these 232 patients, 55 (24%) presented with isolated hyperCKemia and 176 (76%) with hyperCKemia and LGMW. With both features present, 94% of the patients showed a low enzymatic activity. Mutational analysis found GAA gene mutations in 74 patients (2.4%); herein 70 patients were heterozygote for the common GAA gene splice-site mutation c.-32-13T>G. The most common clinical presentation in the confirmed Pompe cohort was a limb-girdle phenotype (85.3%) combined with ventilatory insufficiency (61%). Isolated hyperCKemia was found in 12%, while 2.7 had hyperCKemia and ventilatory insufficiency only.

CONCLUSIONS: In a large cohort of unselected adult patients with hyperCKemia and/or LGMW, we found a prevalence of late-onset Pompe disease of 2.4%. Therefore, targeted screening of such a population should be encouraged in clinical practice.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0028-3878
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 19.07.2016
PubMed 27170567