Uridine-responsive epileptic encephalopathy due to inherited variants in CAD: A Tale of Two Siblings.

McGraw CM., Mahida S., Jayakar P., Koh HY., Taylor A., Resnick T., Rodan L., Schwartz MA., Ejaz A., Sankaran VG., Berry G., Poduri A.

We report two siblings with intractable epilepsy, developmental regression, and progressive cerebellar atrophy due to biallelic variants in the gene CAD. For the affected girl, uridine started at age 5 resulted in dramatic improvements in seizure control and development, cessation of cerebellar atrophy, and resolution of hematological abnormalities. Her older brother had a more severe course and only modest response to uridine started at 14 years old. Treatment of this progressive condition via uridine supplementation provides an example of precision diagnosis and treatment using clear outcome measures and biomarkers to monitor efficacy.

DOI

10.1002/acn3.51272

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2021-03-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

8

Pages

716 - 722

Total pages

6

Keywords

Aspartate Carbamoyltransferase, Atrophy, Carbamoyl-Phosphate Synthase (Glutamine-Hydrolyzing), Cerebellar Diseases, Child, Child, Preschool, Developmental Disabilities, Dihydroorotase, Disease Progression, Drug Resistant Epilepsy, Female, Humans, Male, Pedigree, Siblings, Uridine

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