C9ORF72 repeat expansions in the frontotemporal dementias spectrum of diseases: a flow-chart for genetic testing.

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Le Ber, Isabelle | Camuzat, Agnès | Guillot-Noel, Lena | Hannequin, Didier | Lacomblez, Lucette | Golfier, Véronique | Puel, Michèle | Martinaud, Olivier | Deramecourt, Vincent | Rivaud-Pechoux, Sophie | Millecamps, Stéphanie | Vercelletto, Martine | Couratier, Philippe | Sellal, François | Pasquier, Florence | Salachas, François | Thomas-Antérion, Catherine | Didic, Mira | Pariente, Jérémie | Seilhean, Danielle | Ruberg, Merle | Wargon, Isabelle | Blanc, Frédéric | Camu, William | Michel, Bernard-François | Berger, Eric | Sauvée, Mathilde | Thauvin-Robinet, Christel | Mondon, Karl | Tournier-Lasserve, Elisabeth | Goizet, Cyril | Fleury, Marie | Viennet, Gabriel | Verpillat, Patrice | Meininger, Vincent | Duyckaerts, Charles | Dubois, Bruno | Brice, Alexis

Edité par CCSD ; IOS Press -

International audience. Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) refers to a disease spectrum including the behavioral variant FTD (bvFTD), primary progressive aphasia (PPA), progressive supranuclear palsy/corticobasal degeneration syndrome (PSP/CBDS), and FTD with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FTD-ALS). A GGGGCC expansion in C9ORF72 is a major cause of FTD and ALS. C9ORF72 was analyzed in 833 bvFTD, FTD-ALS, PPA, and PSP/CBDS probands; 202 patients from 151 families carried an expansion. C9ORF72 expansions were much more frequent in the large subgroup of patients with familial FTD-ALS (65.9%) than in those with pure FTD (12.8%); they were even more frequent than in familial pure ALS, according to estimated frequencies in the literature (23-50%). The frequency of carriers in non-familial FTD-ALS (12.7%) indicates that C9ORF72 should be analyzed even when family history is negative. Mutations were detected in 6.8% of PPA patients, and in 3.2% of patients with a clinical phenotype of PSP, thus enlarging the phenotype spectrum of C9ORF72. Onset was later in C9ORF72 (57.4 years, 95%CI: 55.9-56.1) than in MAPT patients (46.8, 95%CI: 43.0-50.6; p = 0.00001) and the same as in PGRN patients (59.6 years; 95%CI: 57.6-61.7; p = 0.4). ALS was more frequent in C9ORF72 than in MAPT and PGRN patients; onset before age 50 and parkinsonism were indicative of MAPT mutations, whereas hallucinations were indicative of PGRN mutations; prioritization of genetic testing is thus possible. Penetrance was age- and gender-dependent: by age 50, 78% of male carriers were symptomatic, but only 52% of females. This can also guide genetic testing and counseling. A flowchart for genetic testing is thus proposed.

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