GNAO1 variants were recently discovered as causes of epileptic encephalopathies and heterogeneous syndromes presenting with movement disorders (MDs), whose phenomenology and clinical course are yet undefined. We herein focused on GNAO1-related MD, providing an analytical review of existing data to outline the main MD phenomenology and management, clinical evolution and genotype- phenotype correlations. Reviewing 41 previously published patients and assessing 5 novel cases, a comprehensive cohort of 46 patients was analyzed, reassuming knowledge about genotypes, phenotypes, disease course and treatment of this condition. GNAO1-related MD consisted of a severe early-onset hyperkinetic syndrome, with prominent chorea, dystonia and orofacial dyskinesia. Symptoms are poorly responsive to medical therapy and fluctuate, with critical and life-threatening exacerbations, such as status dystonicus. The presence of a choreiform MD appears to be predictive of a higher risk of movement disorder emergency. Surgical treatments are sometimes effective, although severe disabilities persist. Differently from the early infantile epileptic encephalopathy phenotype (associated with loss of function variants), no clear correlation between genotype and MD phenotype emerged, although some variants recurred more frequently, mainly affecting exons 6 and 7.

Phenomenology and clinical course of movement disorder in GNAO1 variants: Results from an analytical review / Schirinzi, Tommaso; Garone, Giacomo; Travaglini, Lorena; Vasco, Gessica; Galosi, Serena; Rios, Loreto; Castiglioni, Claudia; Barassi, Claudia; Battaglia, Domenica; Luigia Gambardella, Maria; Cantonetti, Laura; Graziola, Federica; Efisio Marras, Carlo; Castelli, Enrico; Bertini, Enrico; Capuano, Alessandro; Leuzzi, Vincenzo. - In: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS. - ISSN 1353-8020. - 61:(2019), pp. 19-25. [10.1016/j.parkreldis.2018.11.019]

Phenomenology and clinical course of movement disorder in GNAO1 variants: Results from an analytical review

Giacomo Garone;Lorena Travaglini;Serena Galosi;Enrico Bertini;Vincenzo Leuzzi
2019

Abstract

GNAO1 variants were recently discovered as causes of epileptic encephalopathies and heterogeneous syndromes presenting with movement disorders (MDs), whose phenomenology and clinical course are yet undefined. We herein focused on GNAO1-related MD, providing an analytical review of existing data to outline the main MD phenomenology and management, clinical evolution and genotype- phenotype correlations. Reviewing 41 previously published patients and assessing 5 novel cases, a comprehensive cohort of 46 patients was analyzed, reassuming knowledge about genotypes, phenotypes, disease course and treatment of this condition. GNAO1-related MD consisted of a severe early-onset hyperkinetic syndrome, with prominent chorea, dystonia and orofacial dyskinesia. Symptoms are poorly responsive to medical therapy and fluctuate, with critical and life-threatening exacerbations, such as status dystonicus. The presence of a choreiform MD appears to be predictive of a higher risk of movement disorder emergency. Surgical treatments are sometimes effective, although severe disabilities persist. Differently from the early infantile epileptic encephalopathy phenotype (associated with loss of function variants), no clear correlation between genotype and MD phenotype emerged, although some variants recurred more frequently, mainly affecting exons 6 and 7.
2019
GNAO1; Statusdy stonicus; Chorea; Dystonia; Children movement disorders; Movement disorder emergencies
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01g Articolo di rassegna (Review)
Phenomenology and clinical course of movement disorder in GNAO1 variants: Results from an analytical review / Schirinzi, Tommaso; Garone, Giacomo; Travaglini, Lorena; Vasco, Gessica; Galosi, Serena; Rios, Loreto; Castiglioni, Claudia; Barassi, Claudia; Battaglia, Domenica; Luigia Gambardella, Maria; Cantonetti, Laura; Graziola, Federica; Efisio Marras, Carlo; Castelli, Enrico; Bertini, Enrico; Capuano, Alessandro; Leuzzi, Vincenzo. - In: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS. - ISSN 1353-8020. - 61:(2019), pp. 19-25. [10.1016/j.parkreldis.2018.11.019]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1227265
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