Lottie D Morison, Adam P Vogel, John Christodoulou, Wendy A Gold, Dylan Verden, Wendy K Chung, Ruth Braden, Joanna Bredebusch, Simranpreet Kaur, Ingrid E Scheffer, Angela T Morgan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
KIF1A-associated neurological disorder (KAND) is a genetic condition characterised by motor, cognitive and ophthalmologic features. The speech and language phenotype have not been systematically analysed. Here, we assess speech and language using observer- and clinician-reported outcomes, and performance outcome measures. 44 individuals (25 female) with KAND (median age 7 years, range 1-60 years) participated. Median age at diagnosis was 4 years (range 0.5-58 years). KIF1A variants were missense (41/44 individuals, 93%), intragenic deletion (2/44, 5%) and splice site (1/44, 2%). Age at first words was delayed (>12 months) in 38/44 (86%) individuals. At assessment, 28/44 (64%) combined words into sentences and all of the 20 individuals assessed had dysarthria. Apraxic speech features and phonological impairments occurred in children aged under 8 years. 36/37 (97%) participants had language impairment, with expressive language skills stronger than receptive (p = 0.02) and written (p = 0.03) language on the Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scales. 7/32 (22%) caregivers reported speech and language regression. Mild to severe intellectual disability occurred in 31/33 (94%) individuals. 22/44 (50%) participants had used augmentative and alternative communication, such as key word sign or speech generating devices. Individuals had average social motivation skills in contrast to moderately impaired social cognition, communication and awareness on the Social Responsiveness Scale (p < 0.05). 16/44 (36%) had epilepsy and 40/44 (91%) had visual impairment, namely nystagmus (16/44, 36%), optic nerve atrophy and strabismus (both 12/44, 27%). Individuals with KAND frequently have speech and language disorders necessitating early and targeted speech and language interventions.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Human Genetics is the official journal of the European Society of Human Genetics, publishing high-quality, original research papers, short reports and reviews in the rapidly expanding field of human genetics and genomics. It covers molecular, clinical and cytogenetics, interfacing between advanced biomedical research and the clinician, and bridging the great diversity of facilities, resources and viewpoints in the genetics community.
Key areas include:
-Monogenic and multifactorial disorders
-Development and malformation
-Hereditary cancer
-Medical Genomics
-Gene mapping and functional studies
-Genotype-phenotype correlations
-Genetic variation and genome diversity
-Statistical and computational genetics
-Bioinformatics
-Advances in diagnostics
-Therapy and prevention
-Animal models
-Genetic services
-Community genetics