TY - JOUR
T1 - Timing of cognitive decline in CLN3 disease
AU - Kuper, Willemijn F.E.
AU - van Alfen, Claudia
AU - Rigterink, Roeliene H.
AU - Fuchs, Sabine A.
AU - van Genderen, Maria M.
AU - van Hasselt, Peter M.
N1 - Funding Information:
Details of funding Willemijn F.E. Kuper receives unrestricted financial support from the Beat Batten Foundation and the Friends of the Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital Foundation. The author(s) confirm(s) independence from the sponsors; the content of the article has not been influenced by the sponsors.
Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We thank the Beat Batten Foundation and the Friends of the Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital Foundation for their support for this study.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, The Author(s).
PY - 2018/3/1
Y1 - 2018/3/1
N2 - Background: CLN3 disease is a major cause of childhood neurodegeneration. Onset of visual failure around 6 years of age is thought to precede cognitive deterioration by a few years, but casuistic reports question this paradigm. The aim of our study is to delineate timing of cognitive decline in CLN3 disease. Methods: Early neurocognitive functioning in CLN3 disease was analyzed using age at onset of visual and cognitive decline and IQ scores from literature-derived patient descriptions, supplemented with IQ scores and school history from a retrospective referral center cohort. We analyzed protracted and classical CLN3 separately and added a control group of patients diagnosed with juvenile onset macular degeneration (early onset Stargardt disease) to control for possible effects of rapid vision loss on neurocognitive functioning. Results: Onset of cognitive decline at a mean age of 6.8 years (range 2–13 years, n = 19) paralleled onset of visual deterioration at a mean age of 6.4 years (range 4–9 years, n = 81) as supported by an early decline in IQ scores in classical CLN3 disease. Onset and course of vision loss was similar in patients with protracted CLN3. The decreased IQ levels at diagnosis (mean 68.4, range 57–79, n = 9) in the referral cohort were consistently associated with an aberrant early school history contrasting normal school history and cognition in Stargardt disease patients. Conclusions: Cognitive dysfunction is universally present around diagnosis in classical CLN3 disease.
AB - Background: CLN3 disease is a major cause of childhood neurodegeneration. Onset of visual failure around 6 years of age is thought to precede cognitive deterioration by a few years, but casuistic reports question this paradigm. The aim of our study is to delineate timing of cognitive decline in CLN3 disease. Methods: Early neurocognitive functioning in CLN3 disease was analyzed using age at onset of visual and cognitive decline and IQ scores from literature-derived patient descriptions, supplemented with IQ scores and school history from a retrospective referral center cohort. We analyzed protracted and classical CLN3 separately and added a control group of patients diagnosed with juvenile onset macular degeneration (early onset Stargardt disease) to control for possible effects of rapid vision loss on neurocognitive functioning. Results: Onset of cognitive decline at a mean age of 6.8 years (range 2–13 years, n = 19) paralleled onset of visual deterioration at a mean age of 6.4 years (range 4–9 years, n = 81) as supported by an early decline in IQ scores in classical CLN3 disease. Onset and course of vision loss was similar in patients with protracted CLN3. The decreased IQ levels at diagnosis (mean 68.4, range 57–79, n = 9) in the referral cohort were consistently associated with an aberrant early school history contrasting normal school history and cognition in Stargardt disease patients. Conclusions: Cognitive dysfunction is universally present around diagnosis in classical CLN3 disease.
KW - Childhood neurodegeneration
KW - CLN3 disease
KW - Natural history
KW - Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042698536&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10545-018-0143-x
DO - 10.1007/s10545-018-0143-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 29392585
AN - SCOPUS:85042698536
SN - 0141-8955
VL - 41
SP - 257
EP - 261
JO - Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
JF - Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
IS - 2
ER -