Abstract

Introduction: Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a genetic, progressive microangiopathy caused by mutations in the NOTCH3 gene. Patients often present with migraine and progressive subcortical infarcts resulting in vascular cognitive impairment and death. Currently, there are no disease modifying treatments. Limiting future trials is the lack of an objective construct to classify and monitor severity of disease. The purpose of this study was to gain experience with a novel CADASIL severity grading system. Methods: Neurologists at 5 academic centers retrospectively reviewed charts of those with confirmed CADASIL. Demographic and clinical data were recorded. The CADASIL severity grades were then assigned: 0 (asymptomatic), 1 (migraine alone), 2 (stroke or mild cognitive impairment), 3 (gait impairment or early dementia) and 4 (bedbound) based on available data. Standard descriptive statistical analyses were used. Results: We identified 138 patients; overall mean age of 50.9±13.1 years, 42.8% were men. 15 (10.9%) were grade 0, 50 (36.2%) were grade 1, 41 (44.2%) were grade 2, 12 (8.7%) were grade 3, and none were grade 4. Those with less severe disease tended to be younger, more likely men, had a lower rate of hypertension and diabetes mellitus and were less frequently tobacco users, Table 1. Increasing number of vascular risk factors was associated with higher severity grading. Conclusion: Our study highlights the ability of this severity scale to separate those with CADASIL into an ordinal system. As known in the literature, more advanced phenotypes of CADASIL tend to have more vascular risk factors. Future trials may consider utilizing this ordinal construct to monitor disease progression, response to therapy, or as a screening tool.

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