The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease
Abstract Background/objectives Chediak-Higashi Disease (CHD) is a rare autosomal disorder, purported to have cognitive and neurological impairments. Prior descriptions of cognitive impairment, however, are solely based on subjective, unstructured observations rather than on formal neuropsychological...
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doaj-ce8b5eb2965446b288a7f2db3cbbe97f2020-11-25T02:18:33ZengBMCOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases1750-11722019-05-0114111310.1186/s13023-019-1049-xThe neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi diseaseTalia N. Shirazi0Joseph Snow1Lillian Ham2Greta B. Raglan3Edythe A. Wiggs4Angela C. Summers5Camilo Toro6Wendy J. Introne7National Institute of Mental HealthNational Institute of Mental HealthNational Institute of Mental HealthNational Institute of Mental HealthNational Human Genome Research InstituteNational Institute of Mental HealthNational Human Genome Research InstituteNational Human Genome Research InstituteAbstract Background/objectives Chediak-Higashi Disease (CHD) is a rare autosomal disorder, purported to have cognitive and neurological impairments. Prior descriptions of cognitive impairment, however, are solely based on subjective, unstructured observations rather than on formal neuropsychological measures. Methods Four pediatric and 14 adult patients with diagnostically confirmed CHD were administered a neuropsychological battery assessing memory, attention, processing speed, psychomotor speed, language fluency, executive function, and general intelligence. Nine of the adult patients received follow-up evaluations to elucidate the longitudinal progression or stability of cognition over time. Results Pediatric CHD patients performed within the average range. Adult patients, however, performed below average on nearly all measures administered, and endorsed subjective reports of learning difficulties and poor academic performance in childhood. In particular, patients struggled with memory and psychomotor speed tasks, with 75% or more of patients scoring in the bottom 2.3 percentile in these two domains. No significant declines in cognition were observed among the patients who completed follow-up evaluations (M = 39.90, SD = 8.03 months between visits). Exploratory analyses suggested that adult patients who had classic CHD and previously received bone marrow transplants (BMTs; n = 3) exhibited moderately greater cognitive impairment than adult patients who had atypical CHD and had not received BMTs (n = 10). Conclusions Adult patients with CHD uniformly exhibit deficits in multiple domains, but in psychomotor speed and memory, in particular. Based on their neuropsychological profile, their ability to hold jobs and succeed in school may require support and special accommodations. The source of cognitive deficits is probably multifactorial including central nervous system involvement in CHD, and, for those transplanted, BMT-related side effects and complications. Absence of cognitive decline at three-year follow-up is encouraging but does not exclude progression at a slower time-scale. Future work should elucidate the possible effects and timing of BMT on cognition, as well as the mechanisms driving neuropsychological impairment in CHD.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13023-019-1049-xChediak-Higashi diseaseIntellectual disabilityNeuropsychologyBone marrow transplant |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Talia N. Shirazi Joseph Snow Lillian Ham Greta B. Raglan Edythe A. Wiggs Angela C. Summers Camilo Toro Wendy J. Introne |
spellingShingle |
Talia N. Shirazi Joseph Snow Lillian Ham Greta B. Raglan Edythe A. Wiggs Angela C. Summers Camilo Toro Wendy J. Introne The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases Chediak-Higashi disease Intellectual disability Neuropsychology Bone marrow transplant |
author_facet |
Talia N. Shirazi Joseph Snow Lillian Ham Greta B. Raglan Edythe A. Wiggs Angela C. Summers Camilo Toro Wendy J. Introne |
author_sort |
Talia N. Shirazi |
title |
The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease |
title_short |
The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease |
title_full |
The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease |
title_fullStr |
The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease |
title_full_unstemmed |
The neuropsychological phenotype of Chediak-Higashi disease |
title_sort |
neuropsychological phenotype of chediak-higashi disease |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases |
issn |
1750-1172 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Background/objectives Chediak-Higashi Disease (CHD) is a rare autosomal disorder, purported to have cognitive and neurological impairments. Prior descriptions of cognitive impairment, however, are solely based on subjective, unstructured observations rather than on formal neuropsychological measures. Methods Four pediatric and 14 adult patients with diagnostically confirmed CHD were administered a neuropsychological battery assessing memory, attention, processing speed, psychomotor speed, language fluency, executive function, and general intelligence. Nine of the adult patients received follow-up evaluations to elucidate the longitudinal progression or stability of cognition over time. Results Pediatric CHD patients performed within the average range. Adult patients, however, performed below average on nearly all measures administered, and endorsed subjective reports of learning difficulties and poor academic performance in childhood. In particular, patients struggled with memory and psychomotor speed tasks, with 75% or more of patients scoring in the bottom 2.3 percentile in these two domains. No significant declines in cognition were observed among the patients who completed follow-up evaluations (M = 39.90, SD = 8.03 months between visits). Exploratory analyses suggested that adult patients who had classic CHD and previously received bone marrow transplants (BMTs; n = 3) exhibited moderately greater cognitive impairment than adult patients who had atypical CHD and had not received BMTs (n = 10). Conclusions Adult patients with CHD uniformly exhibit deficits in multiple domains, but in psychomotor speed and memory, in particular. Based on their neuropsychological profile, their ability to hold jobs and succeed in school may require support and special accommodations. The source of cognitive deficits is probably multifactorial including central nervous system involvement in CHD, and, for those transplanted, BMT-related side effects and complications. Absence of cognitive decline at three-year follow-up is encouraging but does not exclude progression at a slower time-scale. Future work should elucidate the possible effects and timing of BMT on cognition, as well as the mechanisms driving neuropsychological impairment in CHD. |
topic |
Chediak-Higashi disease Intellectual disability Neuropsychology Bone marrow transplant |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13023-019-1049-x |
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