Phenotype and natural history of mitochondrial membrane protein-associated neurodegeneration
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Gorriz Sáez, Juan ManuelDate
2024-03-22Referencia bibliográfica
Phenotype and natural history of mitochondrial membrane protein-associated neurodegeneration V Iankova, P Sparber, M Rohani, P Dusek, B Büchner, I Karin, ... Brain 147 (4), 1389-1398
Abstract
Mitochondrial membrane protein-associated neurodegeneration (MPAN) is an ultraorphan neurogenetic disease
from the group of neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) disorders. Here we report cross-sectional
and longitudinal data to define the phenotype, to assess disease progression and to estimate sample sizes for clinical
trials.
We enrolled patients with genetically confirmed MPAN from the Treat Iron-Related Childhood-Onset
Neurodegeneration (TIRCON) registry and cohort study, and from additional sites. Linear mixed-effect modelling
(LMEM) was used to calculate annual progression rates for the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS),
Barry–Albright Dystonia (BAD) scale, Schwab and England Activities of Daily Living (SE-ADL) scale and the
Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL).
We investigated 85 MPAN patients cross-sectionally, with functional outcome data collected in 45. Median age at onset
was 9 years and the median diagnostic delay was 5 years. The most common findings were gait disturbance (99%),
pyramidal involvement (95%), dysarthria (90%), vision disturbances (82%), with all but dysarthria presenting early in
the disease course. After 16 years with the disease, 50% of patients were wheelchair dependent. LMEM showed an
annual progression rate of 4.5 points in total UPDRS. The total BAD scale score showed no significant progression
over time. The SE-ADL scale and the patient- and parent-reported PedsQL showed a decline of 3.9%, 2.14 and 2.05
points, respectively. No patient subpopulations were identified based on longitudinal trajectories.
Our cross-sectional results define the order of onset and frequency of symptoms in MPAN, which will inform the diagnostic
process, help to shorten diagnostic delay and aid in counselling patients, parents and caregivers. Our longitudinal
findings define the natural history of MPAN, reveal the most responsive outcomes and highlight the need for an
MPAN-specific rating approach. Our sample size estimations inform the design of upcoming clinical trials.