AI Article Synopsis

  • Gaucher disease is the most common lysosomal storage disorder, especially prevalent among Ashkenazi Jews, with type 1 showing varying symptoms but no neurological involvement.
  • Researchers analyzed 161 symptomatic type 1 patients, focusing on clinical factors like age at symptom onset, organ involvement, and disease severity, revealing significant differences based on genotype.
  • The findings indicate that those with the N370S homozygous genotype experience milder symptoms and later onset of the disease compared to other genotypes, which has implications for genetic counseling and treatment strategies.

Article Abstract

Gaucher disease is the most frequent lysosomal storage disease and the most prevalent genetic disease among Ashkenazi Jews. Gaucher disease type 1 is characterized by marked variability of the phenotype and by the absence of neuronopathic involvement. To test the hypothesis that this phenotypic variability was due to genetic compounds of several different mutant alleles, 161 symptomatic patients with Gaucher disease type 1 (> 90% Ashkenazi Jewish) were analyzed for clinical involvement, and their genotypes were determined. Qualitative and quantitative measures of disease involvement included age at onset of the disease manifestations, hepatic and splenic volumes, age at splenectomy, and severity of bony disease. Highly statistically significant differences (P < .005) were found in each clinical parameter in patients with the N370S/N370S genotype compared with those patients with the N370S/84GG, N370S/L444P, and N370S/? genotypes. The symptomatic N370S homozygotes had onset of their disease two to three decades later than patients with the other genotypes. In addition, patients with the latter genotypes have much more severely involved livers, spleens, and bones and had a higher incidence of splenectomy at an earlier age. These predictive genotype analyses provide the basis for genetic care delivery and therapeutic recommendations in patients affected with Gaucher disease type 1.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1682271PMC

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