Abstract

We describe a case of long-living COLQ-related congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS) benefitting from ephedrine with an overall improvement quantified with functional measures. A 71-year-old man was referred with limb-girdle/axial myopathy and fatigability since infancy. In his thirties, a decremental response was observed at 3Hz-nerve stimulation, although testing seronegative for anti-neuromuscular junction antibodies. Later, whole exome sequencing (WES)identified a homozygous likely pathogenic variant in COLQ. After 6-month ephedrine treatment, the patient doubled the distance in the 6-minute-walk test and reached 10 metres in half of the time. His forced vital capacity (FVC) and first-second-forced expiratory volume (FEV1) increased, as well as all patient-reported outcomes. At the 12-month mark, the overall improvement remained consistent/further enhanced, except for a slight decrease in FVC. This case confirms the efficacy of ephedrine treatment with global improvements in a COLQ-CMS in their late adulthood, demonstrated by quantitative outcome measures. Such indicators may be of interest in upcoming CMS therapeutical trials.

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