基因型
表型
遗传学
中国
生物
基因
地理
考古
作者
Jingying Wu,Xin Cheng,Dong Ji,Hao‐Che Niu,Songquan Yao,Xukun Lv,Jian‐Qiang Wang,Ziyi Li,Haoran Zheng,Yuwen Cao,Feixia Zhan,Mengyuan Zhang,Wotu Tian,Xiaojun Huang,Xinghua Luan,Li Cao
摘要
Abstract Background Colony‐stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R)‐related disorder (CRD) is a rare autosomal dominant disease. The clinical and genetic characteristics of Chinese patients have not been elucidated. Objective The objective of the study is to clarify the core features and influence factors of CRD patients in China. Methods Clinical and genetic‐related data of CRD patients in China were collected. Mini‐Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and Sundal MRI Severity Score were evaluated. Whole exome sequencing was used to analyze the CSF1R mutation status. Patients were compared between different sexes, mutation types, or mutation locations. Results A total of 103 patients were included, with a male‐to‐female ratio of 1:1.51. The average age of onset was (40.75 ± 8.58). Cognitive impairment (85.1%, 86/101) and parkinsonism (76.2%, 77/101) were the main clinical symptoms. The most common imaging feature was bilateral asymmetric white matter changes (100.0%). A total of 66 CSF1R gene mutants (22 novel mutations) were found, and 15 of 92 probands carried c.2381 T > C/p.I794T (16.30%). The MMSE and MoCA scores (17.0 [9.0], 11.90 ± 7.16) of female patients were significantly lower than those of male patients (23.0 [10.0], 16.36 ± 7.89), and the white matter severity score (20.19 ± 8.47) of female patients was significantly higher than that of male patients (16.00 ± 7.62). There is no statistical difference in age of onset between male and female patients. Conclusions The core manifestations of Chinese CRD patients are progressive cognitive decline, parkinsonism, and bilateral asymmetric white matter changes. Compared to men, women have more severe cognitive impairment and imaging changes. c.2381 T > C/p.I794T is a hotspot mutation in Chinese patients. © 2024 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
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