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Clinical and molecular genetic characteristics of 24 families of hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy and literature review.

OBJECTIVES: Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy (HNPP) is a rare autosomal dominant peripheral neuropathy, usually caused by heterozygous deletion mutations in the peripheral myelin protein 22 ( PMP22 ) gene. This study aims to investigate the clinical and molecular genetic characteristics of HNPP.

METHODS: HNPP patients in the Department of Neurology at Third Xiangya Hospital of Central South University from 2009 to 2023 were included in this study. The general clinical data, nervous electrophysiological and molecular genetic examination results were collected and analyzed. Molecular genetic examination was to screen for deletion of PMP22 gene using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) after extracting genomic DNA from peripheral blood; and if no PMP22 deletion mutation was detected, next-generation sequencing was used to screen for PMP22 point mutations. The related literatures of HNPP were reviewed, and the clinical and molecular genetic characteristics of HNPP patients were analyzed.

RESULTS: A total of 34 HNPP patients from 24 unrelated Chinese Han families were included in this study, including 25 males and 9 females. The average age at illness onset was 22.0 years. Sixty-two point five percent of the families had a positive family history. Among them, 30 patients had symptoms of peripheral nerve paralysis. Patients often presented with paroxysmal single limb weakness with (or) numbness (25/30), and some patients had paroxysmal unilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve (vagus nerve) paralysis (2/30). Physical examination revealed muscle weakness (23/29), hypoesthesia (9/29), weakened or absent ankle reflexes (20/29), distal limb muscle atrophy (8/29) and high arched feet (5/29). Most patients (26/30) could fully recover to normal after an acute attack. Thirty-one patients in our group underwent nervous electrophysiological examination, and showed multiple demyelinating peripheral neuropathies with both motor and sensory nerves involved. Most patients showed significantly prolonged distal motor latency (DML), mild to moderate nerve conduction velocity slowing, decreased amplitude of compound muscle action potential (CMAP) and sensory nerve action potential (SNAP), and sometimes with conduction block. Nerve motor conduction velocity was (48.5±5.5) m/s, and the CMAP amplitude was (8.4±5.1) mV. Nerve sensory conduction velocity was (37.4±10.5) m/s, and the SNAP amplitude was (14.4±15.2) μV. There were 24 families, 23 of whom had the classical PMP22 deletion, the last one had a heterozygous pathogenic variant in the PMP22 gene sequence (c.434delT). By reviewing clinical data and genetic testing results of reported 1 734 HNPP families, we found that heterozygous deletion mutation of PMP22 was the most common pathogenic mutation of HNPP (93.4%). Other patients were caused by PMP22 small mutations (4.0%), PMP22 heterozygous gross deletions (0.6%), and PMP22 complex rearrangements (0.1%). Thirty-eight sorts of HNPP-related PMP22 small mutations was reported, including missense mutations (10/38), nonsense mutations (4/38), base deletion mutations (13/38), base insertion mutations (3/38), and shear site mutations (8/38). HNPP patients most often presented with episodic painless single nerve palsy. Common peroneal nerve, ulnar nerve, and brachial plexus nerve were the most common involved nerves, accounting for about 75%. Only eighteen patients with cranial nerve involved was reported.

CONCLUSIONS: Heterozygous deletion mutation of PMP22 is the most common pathogenic mutation of HNPP. Patients is characterized by episodic and painless peripheral nerve paralysis, mainly involving common peroneal nerve, ulnar nerve, and other peripheral nerves. Nervous electrophysiological examination has high sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of HNPP, which is manifested by extensive demyelinating changes. For patients with suspected HNPP, nervous electrophysiological examination and PMP22 -MLPA detection are preferred. Sanger sequencing or next generation sequencing can be considered to detect other mutations of PMP22 .

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