: Childhood-onset progressive ataxias are rare neurodegenerative disorders characterized by cerebellar signs, sometimes associated with other neurological or extra-neurological features. The autosomal dominant forms, known as spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs), linked to trinucleotide (i.e., CAG) repeat disorders, are ultra-rare in children. We describe three patients from two unrelated families affected by spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) and present a literature review of pediatric cases. : The patients' clinical and genetic data were collected retrospectively. : The first case was a 9.5-year-old boy, affected by ataxia with oculomotor apraxia and cerebellar atrophy, subcortical myoclonus, and peripheral axonal sensitive polyneuropathy caused by a pathologic expansion in , inherited from his asymptomatic father. Two brothers with familial SCA2 presented neurodegeneration leading to early death in one case and progressive ataxia, parkinsonism, and epilepsy with preserved ambulation at age 18 years in the second. To date, 19 pediatric patients affected by SCA2 have been reported, 3 of whom had a phenotype consistent with progressive ataxia with shorter CAG repeats, while 16 had more severe early-onset encephalopathy, with longer alleles. : Although they are ultra-rare, trinucleotide repeat disorders must be considered in differential diagnosis of hereditary progressive ataxias in children, especially considering that they require targeted genetic testing and can manifest even before a parental carrier becomes symptomatic. Thus, they must also be taken into account with negative family history and when Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) results are inconclusive. Notably, the association between cerebellar ataxia and other movement disorders should raise suspicion of SCA2 among differential diagnoses.

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