Objective To provide a variant-specific estimate of incidence, penetrance, sex distribution, and association with dementia of the 4 most common Parkinson disease (PD)-associated GBA variants, we analyzed a large cohort of 4,923 Italian unrelated patients with primary degenerative parkinsonism (including 3,832 PD) enrolled in a single tertiary care center and 7,757 ethnically matched controls. Methods The p.E326K, p.T369M, p.N370S, and p.L444P variants were screened using an allele-specific multiplexed PCR approach. All statistical procedures were performed using R or Plink v1.07. Results Among the 4 analyzed variants, the p.L444P confirmed to be the most strongly associated with disease risk for PD, PD dementia (PDD), and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) (odds ratio [OR] for PD 15.63, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 8.04–30.37, p = 4.97*10-16; OR for PDD 29.57, 95% CI = 14.07–62.13, p = 3.86*10-19; OR for DLB 102.7, 95% CI = 31.38–336.1, p = 1.91*10-14). However, an unexpectedly high risk for dementia was conferred by p.E326K (OR for PDD 4.80, 95% CI = 2.87–8.02, p = 2.12*10-9; OR for DLB 12.24, 95% CI = 4.95–30.24, p = 5.71*10-8), which, on the basis of the impact on glucocerebrosidase activity, would be expected to be mild. The 1.5–2:1 male sex bias described in sporadic PD was lost in p.T369M carriers. We also showed that PD penetrance for p.L444P could reach the 15% at age 75 years. Conclusions We report a large monocentric study on GBA-PD assessing mutation-specific data on the sex distribution, penetrance, incidence, and association with dementia of the 4 most frequent deleterious variants in GBA.

The SPID-GBA study: Sex distribution, penetrance, incidence, and dementia in GBA-PD / L. Straniero, R. Asselta, S. Bonvegna, V. Rimoldi, G. Melistaccio, G. Solda, M. Aureli, M.D. Porta, U. Lucca, A. Di Fonzo, A. Zecchinelli, G. Pezzoli, R. Cilia, S. Duga. - In: NEUROLOGY. GENETICS. - ISSN 2376-7839. - 6:6(2020 Dec), pp. e523.1-e523.13. [10.1212/NXG.0000000000000523]

The SPID-GBA study: Sex distribution, penetrance, incidence, and dementia in GBA-PD

L. Straniero
Primo
;
R. Asselta
Secondo
;
V. Rimoldi;M. Aureli;S. Duga
Ultimo
2020

Abstract

Objective To provide a variant-specific estimate of incidence, penetrance, sex distribution, and association with dementia of the 4 most common Parkinson disease (PD)-associated GBA variants, we analyzed a large cohort of 4,923 Italian unrelated patients with primary degenerative parkinsonism (including 3,832 PD) enrolled in a single tertiary care center and 7,757 ethnically matched controls. Methods The p.E326K, p.T369M, p.N370S, and p.L444P variants were screened using an allele-specific multiplexed PCR approach. All statistical procedures were performed using R or Plink v1.07. Results Among the 4 analyzed variants, the p.L444P confirmed to be the most strongly associated with disease risk for PD, PD dementia (PDD), and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) (odds ratio [OR] for PD 15.63, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 8.04–30.37, p = 4.97*10-16; OR for PDD 29.57, 95% CI = 14.07–62.13, p = 3.86*10-19; OR for DLB 102.7, 95% CI = 31.38–336.1, p = 1.91*10-14). However, an unexpectedly high risk for dementia was conferred by p.E326K (OR for PDD 4.80, 95% CI = 2.87–8.02, p = 2.12*10-9; OR for DLB 12.24, 95% CI = 4.95–30.24, p = 5.71*10-8), which, on the basis of the impact on glucocerebrosidase activity, would be expected to be mild. The 1.5–2:1 male sex bias described in sporadic PD was lost in p.T369M carriers. We also showed that PD penetrance for p.L444P could reach the 15% at age 75 years. Conclusions We report a large monocentric study on GBA-PD assessing mutation-specific data on the sex distribution, penetrance, incidence, and association with dementia of the 4 most frequent deleterious variants in GBA.
Settore BIO/10 - Biochimica
dic-2020
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
e523.full.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 457.27 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
457.27 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/916476
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 17
  • Scopus 35
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 35
social impact