Prevalence and mutation spectrum of skeletal muscle channelopathies in the Netherlands

B C Stunnenberg, J Raaphorst, J C W Deenen, T P Links, A A Wilde, D J Verbove, E J Kamsteeg, A van den Wijngaard, C G Faber, G J van der Wilt, B G M van Engelen, G Drost, H B Ginjaar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

43 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Few reliable data exist on the prevalence of skeletal muscle channelopathies. We determined the minimum point prevalence of genetically-defined skeletal muscle channelopathies in the Netherlands and report their mutation spectrum. Minimum point prevalence rates were calculated as number of genetically-confirmed skeletal muscle channelopathy patients (CLCN1, SCN4A, CACNA1S and KCNJ2 gene mutations) in the Netherlands (1990-2015) divided by the total number of at-risk individuals. Rates were expressed as cases/100.000 and 95% confidence intervals were calculated based on Poisson distribution. Results of standardized genetic diagnostic procedures were used to analyze mutation spectra. We identified 405 patients from 234 unrelated pedigrees, resulting in a minimum point prevalence of 2.38/100.000 (95% CI 2.16-2.63) for skeletal muscle channelopathies in the Netherlands. Minimum point prevalence rates for the disease groups, non-dystrophic myotonia and periodic paralysis, were 1.70/100.000 and 0.69/100.000 respectively. Sixty-one different CLCN1 mutations (including 12 novel mutations) were detected in myotonia congenita. Twenty-eight different SCN4A missense mutations (including three novel mutations) were identified in paramyotonia congenita/sodium channel myotonia, hypokalemic periodic paralysis and hyperkalemic periodic paralysis. Four different CACNA1S missense mutations were detected in hypokalemic periodic paralysis and five KCNJ2 missense mutations in Andersen-Tawil syndrome. The minimum point prevalence rates for genetically-defined skeletal muscle channelopathies confirm their rare disease status in the Netherlands. Rates are almost twice as high as in the UK and more in line with pre-genetic prevalence estimates in parts of Scandinavia. Future diagnostic and therapeutic studies may benefit from knowledge of the mutation spectrum of skeletal muscle channelopathies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)402-407
Number of pages6
JournalNeuromuscular disorders
Volume28
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May-2018

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