Chorea-acanthocytosis presenting as autosomal recessive epilepsy in a family with a novel VPS13A mutation

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Abstract

Chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) is a rare, adult-onset disease usually characterized by, hence the name, a movement disorder and acanthocytosis in the blood. It is caused by mutations of the VPS13A gene with an autosomal recessive transmission. We report a consanguineous Turkish family with a different and informative clinical and diagnostic course. Three siblings developed seizures and the index patient had been diagnosed with bilateral temporal lobe epilepsy. A key finding, however, was the basal ganglia involvement in neuroimaging although no movement disorder was present. [18F]FDG-PET showed a prominent decline in striatal glucose metabolism at 31 years of age and [123I]FP-CIT-SPECT revealed a moderate loss of striatal dopamine transporter availability. The family was referred for genetic testing and exome sequencing detected a homozygous novel truncating mutation c.4326 T>A (p.Tyr1442*) in VPS13A in all affected siblings. With this case, we present autosomal recessive epilepsy as the predominant phenotype of ChAc with a new homozygous VPS13A mutation and provide pathological structural and molecular neuroimaging findings.

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Weber, J., Frings, L., Rijntjes, M., Urbach, H., Fischer, J., Weiller, C., … Klebe, S. (2019). Chorea-acanthocytosis presenting as autosomal recessive epilepsy in a family with a novel VPS13A mutation. Frontiers in Neurology, 10(JAN). https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.01168

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