AI Article Synopsis

  • About 30% of people with downbeat nystagmus (DBN) don't know why they have it, and researchers think that a genetic issue called GAA repeat expansions might be a common cause for this.
  • In a study with 170 patients, they found that 48% had these GAA repeat expansions and that patients with this genetic change had more eye and movement issues related to the brain's balance control.
  • The patients with GAA repeat expansions responded better to a treatment called 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) compared to those without, showing that this genetic cause can help doctors decide how to treat DBN.

Article Abstract

The cause of downbeat nystagmus (DBN) remains unknown in approximately 30% of patients (idiopathic DBN). Here, we hypothesized that: (i) (GAA) repeat expansions represent a frequent genetic cause of idiopathic DBN syndromes, (ii) are treatable with 4-aminopyridine (4-AP), and (iii) (GAA) alleles are potentially pathogenic. We conducted a multi-modal cohort study of 170 patients with idiopathic DBN that comprised: in-depth ocular motor, neurological, and disease evolution phenotyping; assessment of 4-AP treatment response, including re-analysis of placebo-controlled video-oculography treatment response data from a previous randomized double-blind 4-AP trial; and genotyping of the repeat. Frequency of (GAA) expansions was 48% (82/170) in the entire idiopathic DBN cohort. Additional cerebellar ocular motor signs were observed in 100% (82/82), cerebellar ataxia in 43% (35/82), and extracerebellar features in 21% (17/82) of (GAA) - patients. Alleles of 200 to 249 GAA repeats were enriched in patients with DBN (12%; 20/170) compared to controls (0.87%; 19/2,191; OR, 15.20; 95% CI, 7.52-30.80; =9.876e-14). The phenotype of (GAA) - patients closely mirrored that of (GAA) - patients. (GAA) - and (GAA) - patients had a significantly greater clinician-reported (80% vs 31%; =0.0011) and self-reported (59% vs 11%; =0.0003) response rate to 4-AP treatment compared to (GAA) - patients. This included a treatment response with high relevance to everyday living, as exemplified by an improvement of 2 FARS stages in some cases. Placebo-controlled video-oculography data of four (GAA) - patients previously enrolled in a 4-AP randomized double-blind trial showed a significant decrease in slow phase velocity of DBN with 4-AP, but not placebo. This study shows that GAA repeat expansions are a highly frequent genetic cause of DBN syndromes, especially when associated with additional cerebellar features. Moreover, they genetically stratify a subgroup of patients with DBN that appear to be highly responsive to 4-AP, thus paving the way for a "theranostics" approach in DBN syndromes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10418564PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.07.30.23293380DOI Listing

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