Abstract

The mutation detection rate for familial cerebral cavernous malformations (CCM) is extremely high, being about 90% if direct sequencing of the three genes, CCM1, CCM2, and CCM3, is used in conjunction with quantitative analyses to detect larger CCM1-3 deletions/duplications. We here report on an individual who had presented with more than 30 cerebral and spinal cavernous malformations, two intracranial meningiomas, and disease manifestation only in the mid-forties. A CCM1 missense variant of unclear relevance was found during the first sequencing step. Thereafter, direct sequencing of all three CCM genes revealed the typical pathogenic loss-of-function mutation c.598C > T/p.Q200* in the CCM3 gene. Our results demonstrate that mutation analyses of all three CCM genes in the index patient regardless of previous identification of an unclassified CCM1 variant is crucial for reliable predictive testing of at-risk relatives.

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