Abstract

Novel genetic variants exist in patients with hereditary neuromuscular disorders (NMD), including muscular dystrophy. These patients also develop cardiac manifestations. However, the association between these gene variants and cardiac abnormalities is understudied. To determine genetic modifiers and features of cardiac disease in NMD patients, we have reviewed electronic medical records of 651 patients referred to the Muscular Dystrophy Association Care Center at the University of Cincinnati and characterized the clinical phenotype of 14 patients correlating with their next-generation sequencing data. The data were retrieved from the electronic medical records of the 14 patients included in the current study and comprised neurologic and cardiac phenotype and genetic reports which included comparative genomic hybridization array and NGS. Novel associations were uncovered in the following eight patients diagnosed with Limb-girdle Muscular Dystrophy, Bethlem Myopathy, Necrotizing Myopathy, Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease, Peripheral Polyneuropathy, and Valosin-containing Protein-related Myopathy. Mutations in COL6A1, COL6A3, SGCA, SYNE1, FKTN, PLEKHG5, ANO5, and SMCHD1 genes were the most common, and the associated cardiac features included bundle branch blocks, ventricular chamber dilation, septal thickening, and increased outflow track gradients. Our observations suggest that features of cardiac disease and modifying gene mutations in patients with NMD require further investigation to better characterize genotype–phenotype relationships.

Highlights

  • One in every 1000 individuals in the world is affected by hereditary neuromuscular disorders (NMD), including muscular dystrophy (MD)

  • The data were retrieved from electronic medical records (EMR) of patients referred to Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) Care Center at University of Cincinnati Medical Center (UCMC) up to November 2018

  • To determine novel genetic markers and their association with cardiac conditions in patients with NMD, we reviewed EMR of 651 patients referred to the MDA Care Center at UCMC

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Summary

Introduction

One in every 1000 individuals in the world is affected by hereditary neuromuscular disorders (NMD), including muscular dystrophy (MD). The prevalence of NMD varies in different geographic regions and ethnic groups. In a nationwide study in New Zealand, the reported age-standardized prevalence was 22.3 per 100,000 and two-fold higher among individuals of European ancestry compared to Maori, Pasifika, and Asian ethnic groups [1]. In the northern Navarre region of Spain, the prevalence of NMD was as high as 59 per 100,000 individuals [1]. For all types of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), this measure was 15.7 per 100,000, including the highest number of 6.9 per 100,000 reported for CMT type 1A [2]. Over 40 genes have been linked to MD which comprises a group of disorders with muscle weakness and atrophy that can be inherited in an autosomal dominant or recessive, X-linked, or sporadic mode [3,4]

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