- Sha, Sharon J;
- Takada, Leonel T;
- Rankin, Katherine P;
- Yokoyama, Jennifer S;
- Rutherford, Nicola J;
- Fong, Jamie C;
- Khan, Baber;
- Karydas, Anna;
- Baker, Matt C;
- DeJesus-Hernandez, Mariely;
- Pribadi, Mochtar;
- Coppola, Giovanni;
- Geschwind, Daniel H;
- Rademakers, Rosa;
- Lee, Suzee E;
- Seeley, William;
- Miller, Bruce L;
- Boxer, Adam L
Objective
To describe the phenotype of patients with C9FTD/ALS (C9ORF72) hexanucleotide repeat expansion.Methods
A total of 648 patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD)-related clinical diagnoses and Alzheimer disease (AD) dementia were tested for C9ORF72 expansion and 31 carried expanded repeats (C9+). Clinical and neuroimaging data were compared between C9+ (15 behavioral variant FTD [bvFTD], 11 FTD-motor neuron disease [MND], 5 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis [ALS]) and sporadic noncarriers (48 bvFTD, 19 FTD-MND, 6 ALS).Results
All C9+ patients displayed clinical syndromes of bvFTD, ALS, or FTD-MND. At first evaluation, C9+ bvFTD patients had more delusions and greater impairment of working memory, but milder eating dysregulation compared to bvFTD noncarriers. C9+FTD-MND patients had a trend for longer survival and had an earlier age at onset than FTD-MND noncarriers. Voxel-based morphometry demonstrated more thalamic atrophy in FTD and FTD-MND carriers than in noncarriers.Conclusions
Patients with the C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion develop bvFTD, ALS, or FTD-MND with similar clinical and imaging features to sporadic cases. Other FTD spectrum diagnoses and AD dementia appear rare or absent among C9+ individuals. Longer survival in C9+ FTD-MND suggests slower disease progression and thalamic atrophy represents a novel and unexpected feature.