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The natural history of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease caused by PLP1 duplication: A multiyear case series. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on understanding the clinical features and development of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) in 16 patients with gene duplications, ages 7 to 48.
  • The research utilized medical history questionnaires, record reviews, and a functional disability scale to analyze symptoms, development milestones, and functional levels.
  • Findings showed early onset of symptoms, including nystagmus, delays in motor and language development, and ongoing motor impairments, contributing valuable insights into PMD's clinical diversity and potential underlying mechanisms.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to characterize the clinical features, developmental milestones, and the natural history of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) associated with gene duplications. The study examined 16 PMD Patients ranging in age from 7 to 48 years, who had a documented gene duplication. The study examined and analyzed the medical and developmental histories of the subjects utilizing a combination of resources that included medical history questionnaires, medical record reviews, and a 31-point functional disability scale that had been previously validated. The data extracted from the medical records and questionnaires for analysis included information related to medical and developmental histories, level of ambulation and cognition, and degree of functional disability. The summation of findings among the study population demonstrated that the presenting symptoms, developmental milestones achieved, and progression of symptoms reported are consistent with many previous studies of patients with duplications. All patients exhibited onset within the first year of life, with nystagmus predominating as the first symptom noticed. All patients exhibited delays in both motor and language development; however, many individuals were able to meet several developmental milestones. They exhibited some degree of continued motor impairment with none having the ability to walk independently. All patients were able to complete at least some of the cognition achievements and although not all were verbal, a number were able to use communication devices to complete these tasks. A critical tool of the study was the functional disability scale which provided a major advantage in helping quantify the clinical course of PMD, and for several, we were able to gather this information at more than one point in time. These reported findings in our cohort contribute important insight into the clinical heterogeneity and potential underlying mechanisms that define the molecular pathogenesis of the disease. This is one of only a small number of natural history studies examining the clinical course of a cohort of patients with duplications within the context of a validated functional disability scoring system. This study is unique in that it is limited to subjects with gene duplications. This study demonstrated many commonalities to other studies that have characterized the features of PMD and other PLP1-related disorders but also provide significant new insights into the evolving story that marks the natural history.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10457477PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.7814DOI Listing

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