Abstract

AimLate infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis type 2 (CLN2) disease is a rare neurodegenerative disorder presenting in children aged 2–4 years with seizures and loss of motor and language skills, followed by blindness and death in late childhood. Initial presenting features are similar to a range of common epilepsies. We aim to highlight typical clinical and radiological features that may prompt diagnosis of CLN2 disease in early disease stages.MethodsWe present a series of 13 Australian patients with CLN2 disease, describing clinical features, disease evolution, neuroimaging, electroencephalogram, biochemical and genetic results. Expert neuroradiological magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analysis was retrospectively performed on 10 cases.ResultsTwelve patients presented with seizures, with initial seizures being focal (n = 4), generalised tonic–clonic (n = 3), absence (n = 3) and febrile (n = 2). Eleven patients (85%) had a language delay before the onset of seizures. Cerebellar or cerebral atrophy was noted in all patients on centralised MRI review, with abnormalities of the brain‐stem, ventricles, corpus callosum and hippocampi.ConclusionsEarly language delay with the onset of seizures at 2–4 years of age is the hallmark of CLN2 disease. MRI findings of early subtle atrophy in the cerebellum or posterior cortical regions should hasten testing for CLN2 disease to enable early initiation of enzyme replacement therapy.

Highlights

  • One case is described in detail to highlight the early presenting signs and symptoms of ceroid lipofuscinosis type 2 (CLN2) disease diagnosis, and 12 cases are summarised

  • We report the phenotypic evolution, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features and investigation findings in a cohort of 13 Australian patients with CLN2 disease

  • Key points arising from our study include epilepsy syndrome recognition in early CLN2 disease, delineation of the MRI features and the improved seizure control within a small subgroup on enzyme replacement therapy (ERT)

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Summary

Objectives

Late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis type 2 (CLN2) disease is a rare neurodegenerative disorder presenting in children aged 2–4 years with seizures and loss of motor and language skills, followed by blindness and death in late childhood. We aim to highlight typical clinical and radiological features that may prompt diagnosis of CLN2 disease in early disease stages

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