GM2 gangliosidosis in a UK study of children with progressive neurodegeneration: 73 cases reviewed
- PMID: 22115551
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2011.04160.x
GM2 gangliosidosis in a UK study of children with progressive neurodegeneration: 73 cases reviewed
Abstract
Aim: To report the demographic, phenotypic, and time-to-diagnosis characteristics of children with GM2 gangliosidosis referred to the UK study of Progressive Intellectual and Neurological Deterioration.
Method: Case notification is made via monthly surveillance card, administered by the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit to all UK-based paediatricians; children with GM2 gangliosidosis were identified from cases satisfying inclusion in the UK study of Progressive Intellectual and Neurological Deterioration and analysed according to phenotypic and biochemical categories.
Results: Between May 1997 and January 2010, 73 individuals with GM2 gangliosidoses were reported: 40 with Tay-Sachs disease, 31 with Sandhoff disease, and two with GM2 activator protein deficiency. Together they account for 6% (73/1164) of all diagnosed cases of progressive intellectual and neurological deterioration. The majority (62/73) were sporadic index cases with no family history. Children of Pakistani ancestry were overrepresented in all subtypes, particularly juvenile Sandhoff disease, accounting for 10 of 11 notified cases. Infantile-onset variants predominated (55/73); the mean age at onset of symptoms was 6.2 and 4.7 months for infantile-onset Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff disease respectively, and 26.2 and 34.7 months for the corresponding juvenile-onset variants. Time to diagnosis averaged 7.4 months and 28.0 months in infantile- and juvenile-onset disease respectively.
Interpretation: GM2 gangliosidosis is a significant cause of childhood neurodegenerative disease; timely diagnosis relies upon improved clinical recognition, which may be increasingly important as specific therapies become available. There is a potential benefit from the introduction of screening programmes for high-risk ethnic groups.
© The Authors. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology © 2011 Mac Keith Press.
Comment in
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GM2 gangliosidosis: the prototype of lysosomal storage disorders.Dev Med Child Neurol. 2012 Feb;54(2):104-5. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2011.04163.x. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2012. PMID: 22224667 No abstract available.
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