Progressive deafness-dystonia due to SERAC1 mutations: A study of 67 cases

  • Roeltje R Maas
  • Katarzyna Iwanicka-Pronicka
  • Sema Kalkan Ucar
  • Bader Alhaddad
  • Moeenaldeen AlSayed
  • Mohammed A Al-Owain
  • Hamad I Al-Zaidan
  • Shanti Balasubramaniam
  • Ivo Barić
  • Dalal K Bubshait
  • Alberto Burlina
  • John Christodoulou
  • Wendy K Chung
  • Roberto Colombo
  • Niklas Darin
  • Peter Freisinger
  • Maria Teresa Garcia Silva
  • Stephanie Grunewald
  • Tobias B Haack
  • Peter M van Hasselt
  • Omar Hikmat
  • Friederike Hörster
  • Pirjo Isohanni
  • Khushnooda Ramzan
  • Reka Kovacs-Nagy
  • Zita Krumina
  • Elena Martin-Hernandez
  • Johannes A Mayr
  • Patricia McClean
  • Linda De Meirleir
  • Karin Naess
  • Lock H Ngu
  • Magdalena Pajdowska
  • Shamima Rahman
  • Gillian Riordan
  • Lisa Riley
  • Benjamin Roeben
  • Frank Rutsch
  • Rene Santer
  • Manuel Schiff
  • Martine Seders
  • Silvia Sequeira
  • Wolfgang Sperl
  • Christian Staufner
  • Matthis Synofzik
  • Robert W Taylor
  • Joanna Trubicka
  • Konstantinos Tsiakas
  • Ozlem Unal
  • Evangeline Wassmer
  • Yehani Wedatilake
  • Toni Wolff
  • Holger Prokisch
  • Eva Morava
  • Ewa Pronicka
  • Ron A Wevers
  • Arjan P de Brouwer
  • Saskia B Wortmann

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: 3-Methylglutaconic aciduria, dystonia-deafness, hepatopathy, encephalopathy, Leigh-like syndrome (MEGDHEL) syndrome is caused by biallelic variants in SERAC1.

METHODS: This multicenter study addressed the course of disease for each organ system. Metabolic, neuroradiological, and genetic findings are reported.

RESULTS: Sixty-seven individuals (39 previously unreported) from 59 families were included (age range = 5 days-33.4 years, median age = 9 years). A total of 41 different SERAC1 variants were identified, including 20 that have not been reported before. With the exception of 2 families with a milder phenotype, all affected individuals showed a strikingly homogeneous phenotype and time course. Severe, reversible neonatal liver dysfunction and hypoglycemia were seen in >40% of all cases. Starting at a median age of 6 months, muscular hypotonia (91%) was seen, followed by progressive spasticity (82%, median onset = 15 months) and dystonia (82%, 18 months). The majority of affected individuals never learned to walk (68%). Seventy-nine percent suffered hearing loss, 58% never learned to speak, and nearly all had significant intellectual disability (88%). Magnetic resonance imaging features were accordingly homogenous, with bilateral basal ganglia involvement (98%); the characteristic "putaminal eye" was seen in 53%. The urinary marker 3-methylglutaconic aciduria was present in virtually all patients (98%). Supportive treatment focused on spasticity and drooling, and was effective in the individuals treated; hearing aids or cochlear implants did not improve communication skills.

INTERPRETATION: MEGDHEL syndrome is a progressive deafness-dystonia syndrome with frequent and reversible neonatal liver involvement and a strikingly homogenous course of disease. Ann Neurol 2017;82:1004-1015.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0364-5134
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 12.2017
PubMed 29205472