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Prevalence of CADASIL and Fabry disease in a cohort of MRI defined younger onset lacunar stroke

Version 4 2024-03-12, 13:54
Version 3 2023-10-29, 10:21
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 13:54 authored by Laura L. Kilarski, Loes C. A. Rutten-Jacobs, Stephen BevanStephen Bevan, Rob Baker, Ahamad Hassan, Derralynn A. Hughes, Hugh S. Markus

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSECerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), caused by mutations in the NOTCH3 gene, is the most common monogenic disorder causing lacunar stroke and cerebral small vessel disease (SVD). Fabry disease (FD) due to mutations in the GLA gene has been suggested as an underdiagnosed cause of stroke, and one feature is SVD. Previous studies reported varying prevalence of CADASIL and FD in stroke, likely due to varying subtypes studied; no studies have looked at a large cohort of younger onset SVD. We determined the prevalence in a well-defined, MRI-verified cohort of apparently sporadic patients with lacunar infarct.METHODSCaucasian patients with lacunar infarction, aged ?70 years (mean age 56.7 (SD8.6)), were recruited from 72 specialist stroke centres throughout the UK as part of the Young Lacunar Stroke DNA Resource. Patients with a previously confirmed monogenic cause of stroke were excluded. All MRI's and clinical histories were reviewed centrally. Screening was performed for NOTCH3 and GLA mutations.RESULTSOf 994 subjects five had pathogenic NOTCH3 mutations (R169C, R207C, R587C, C1222G and C323S) all resulting in loss or gain of a cysteine in the NOTCH3 protein. All five patients had confluent leukoaraiosis (Fazekas grade ?2). CADASIL prevalence overall was 0.5% (95% CI 0.2%-1.1%) and among cases with confluent leukoaraiosis 1.5% (95% CI 0.6%-3.3%). No classic pathogenic FD mutations were found; one patient had a missense mutation (R118C), associated with late-onset FD.CONCLUSIONCADASIL cases are rare and only detected in SVD patients with confluent leukoaraiosis. No definite FD cases were detected.

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School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

PloS one

Volume

10

Issue

8

Pages/Article Number

e0136352

Publisher

Public Library of Science

ISSN

1932-6203

eISSN

1932-6203

Date Submitted

2015-11-04

Date Accepted

2015-08-01

Date of First Publication

2015-08-25

Date of Final Publication

2015-08-25

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-11-04

ePrints ID

19434

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