Session Information
Date: Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Session Title: Ataxia
Session Time: 12:00pm-1:30pm
Location: Exhibit Hall located in Hall B, Level 2
Objective: To study the extent of phenotypic variability in SCA2 families of Indian origin and to identify factors associated with it.
Background: SCA2 is a inherited cerebellar ataxia characterized by cerebellar ataxia, slowing of saccades and combination of other neurological features. This phenotype is caused by expansion of CAG repeat >32 at ATXN2 loci. SCA2 is also the commonest SCA subtype observed in Indian population.
Methods: Clinically and genetically confirmed 279 SCA2 were identified from consecutive patients enrollment from 1997-2015 in the ataxia clinic for SCA mutation screening. Clinical, genetic and other paraclinical parameters were analyzed in detail for 150 SCA2 patients.
Results: In brief, SCA2 patients comprised 186(Male), 93(female) with mean±SD(range) of age at examination, 35.2±12.8(9-78)years, age at onset(AO), 29.6± 11.1(2-63)years and expanded-CAG repeats between 32-64 and mean(SD) of 42.5(4.6). Over and above features of cerebellar-ataxia, slow-saccades(83%), upper-limb arreflexia(42%), tremor(43%) and extrapyramidal(29%) features were noted as common manifestations but variable association. Phenotype based categorization of all SCA2 patient was possible with following five different clinical subtype, 1) SCA2-type-I(n=24):ataxia ± extrapyramidal ± pyramidal and without brain-stem involvement, 2)SCA2-type-II(n=25):ataxia-plus slow-saccades, 3)SCA2-type-III(n=52):ataxia, slow-saccades with peripheral-neuropathy, 4)SCA2-type-IV(n=34):ataxia,slow-saccades, extrapyramidal ± peripheral-neuropathy; 5)SCA2-type-V(n=12):ataxia, slow-saccades plus hyper-reflexia. We found statistically significant difference in mean(ANOVA) of expanded CAG between type-A(40.2) vs type-C(42.75) and type-D(43.62). Interestingly, the correlation coefficient of CAG and age at onset also varied between these categories such that Type-I(R2=0.024), Type-II(R2=76), Type-III(R2=47), Type-IV(R2=81) and Type-V(R2=61).
Conclusions: SCA2 represent clinic-genetically a heterogeneous disorder with phenotypic spectrum of amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis, Parkinson-disease and cerebellar-ataxia. Genetically, these phenotype associate with intermediate alleles (27-30), low abnormal CAG with CAA interruption(32-40) and pure CAG stretch>32 respectively. The clinical subtypes and phenotypic variability suggest CAG repeats to be major molecular correlate which may further shed insight into molecular pathology in SCA2.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
A.K. Srivastava, A.K. Sonakar, S. Shakya, V. Suroliya, A. Takkar, I. Ahmad, R.K. Singh, I. Singh, D. Vibha, G. Shukla, V. Goyal, K. Prasad, A. Garg, M. Faruq. A largest case series study of spinocerebellar ataxia type 2(SCA2) from India: Do SCA2 clinical subtypes exists? [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2016; 31 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/a-largest-case-series-study-of-spinocerebellar-ataxia-type-2sca2-from-india-do-sca2-clinical-subtypes-exists/. Accessed November 22, 2024.« Back to 2016 International Congress
MDS Abstracts - https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/a-largest-case-series-study-of-spinocerebellar-ataxia-type-2sca2-from-india-do-sca2-clinical-subtypes-exists/