Clinical Description
CADASIL is a disease of the small to medium-sized arteries, mainly affecting the brain. The presenting symptoms, age at onset, and disease progression in CADASIL are variable, both between and within families. The disease is characterized by five main symptoms: transient ischemic attacks and recurrent ischemic strokes; cognitive decline; migraine with aura; mood disturbance; and apathy.
Subcortical ischemic events. Transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) and stroke, the most frequent presentation, are found in approximately 85% of symptomatic individuals [Dichgans et al 1998]. Mean age at onset for ischemic episodes is 47 years (age range 20-70 years) [Opherk et al 2004].
Ischemic episodes typically present as a classic lacunar syndrome (pure motor stroke, ataxic hemiparesis/dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome, pure sensory stroke, sensorimotor stroke), but other lacunar syndromes (brain stem or hemispheric) are also observed [Adib-Samii et al 2010]. Ischemic episodes are often recurrent, leading to severe disability with gait disturbance, urinary incontinence, and pseudobulbar palsy.
Strokes involving the territory of a large artery have occasionally been reported. However, whether these are coincidental observations, or whether (certain sub-populations of) individuals with CADASIL are at increased risk for large vessel stroke, is unclear [Choi et al 2013, Yin et al 2015, Kang & Kim 2015].
Cognitive deficits and dementia. Cognitive decline may start as early as age 35 years. Up to 75% of affected individuals develop dementia, often accompanied by apathy [Dichgans 2009, Reyes et al 2009].
The pattern of cognitive dysfunction is initially characterized by deficits in executive function (timed measures and measures of error monitoring), verbal fluency, and memory with benefit from clues [Peters et al 2005b]. Cognitive dysfunction is accompanied by a narrowing of the field of interest. In most cases, cognitive decline is slowly progressive, with some preservation of recognition and semantic memory, with additional stepwise deterioration. Visuospatial abilities and reasoning decline, especially after age 60. Cognitive decline becomes more apparent with aging and disease progression, ultimately leading to significant alterations in all cognitive domains at an older age [Buffon et al 2006]. Amberla et al [2004] observed deterioration of working memory and executive function in individuals with NOTCH3 pathogenic variants in the pre-stroke phase and inferred that cognitive decline may start insidiously before the onset of symptomatic ischemic episodes.
Migraine, when present, can be the first symptom of CADASIL. Migraine occurs in 30%-75% of individuals with CADASIL, with the first attack occurring at a mean age of 26-29 years [Adib-Samii et al 2010, Tan & Markus 2016, Guey et al 2016]. Eighty to ninety percent of those with migraine have migraine with aura [Guey et al 2016, Tan & Markus 2016]. Migraine auras are sometimes confused with transient ischemic symptoms, since aura may include focal neurologic deficits [Di Donato et al 2017]. Sixty percent of those with migraine with aura have experienced an atypical migraine attack: prolonged, basilar or hemiplegic aura, confusion, fever, or coma [Guey et al 2016].
Psychiatric disorders. In most CADASIL cohorts, psychiatric disturbances are described in about one third of individuals [Adib-Samii et al 2010]. The reported prevalence of psychiatric disturbances is variable: a small study in 23 Italian patients recorded a lifetime risk for depression of 74% and a lifetime risk for a manic episode of 26% [Valenti et al 2011], whereas in a Chinese cohort, psychiatric manifestations were recorded in only 7% of affected individuals [Wang et al 2011]. Apathy has been described in 40% of individuals [Reyes et al 2009]. The psychiatric manifestations vary from personality changes to severe depression. The pathogenesis of psychiatric disturbances in CADASIL is incompletely understood. Psychiatric problems as a presenting symptom of CADASIL have been described [Leyhe et al 2005, Nakamura et al 2005, Park et al 2014].
Reversible acute encephalopathy. Acute encephalopathy has been described in some individuals, with confusion, headache, pyrexia, seizures, and coma, sometimes leading to death [Adib-Samii et al 2010, Ragno et al 2013, Tan & Markus 2016]. Migraine with aura (especially confusional aura) is associated with increased risk of acute encephalopathy, suggesting that they may share pathophysiologic mechanisms [Tan & Markus 2016].
Epilepsy. Epilepsy occurs in 10% of individuals with CADASIL and presents in middle age, usually secondary to stroke [Haan et al 2007]. In a pooled analysis of previous published cases, three of 105 individuals with CADASIL had a seizure as the initial presenting symptom [Desmond et al 1999].
Pregnancy. It has been suggested that the risk for migraine with aura is increased during pregnancy, but especially during puerperium (the period between childbirth and the return of the uterus to its normal size) [Roine et al 2005]. Another study found no association between pregnancy and risk for neurologic events or problems during pregnancy [Donnini et al 2017]. See Pregnancy Management.
Other findings
Cardiac. Controversy exists as to whether CADASIL is associated with cardiac involvement. In a study from The Netherlands, nearly 25% of individuals with CADASIL had a history of acute myocardial infarction (MI) and/or current pathologic Q-waves on electrocardiogram (EKG) [
Lesnik Oberstein et al 2003]. This percentage was significantly higher than in controls without a heterozygous
NOTCH3 pathogenic variant. However, another study of 23 individuals with CADASIL found no signs of previous MI on EKG [
Cumurciuc et al 2006b]. Two studies have suggested an increased risk for arrhythmias, based on increased QT variability on EKG recording [
Rufa et al 2007,
Piccirillo et al 2008].
Nerve. Nerve biopsies may demonstrate signs of axonal damage, demyelination, and ultrastructural changes of the endoneurial blood vessels [
Schröder et al 2005,
Sicurelli et al 2005,
Lackovic et al 2012]. Punch skin biopsies from individuals with CADASIL showed cutaneous somatic and autonomic nerve involvement [
Nolano et al 2016]. Clinically, however, there is no clear evidence that peripheral neuropathy is part of the CADASIL clinical spectrum [
Kang et al 2009].
Renal. NOTCH3 accumulation and granular osmiophilic material (GOM) are also detected in renal arteries, and stenosis of renal arteries has been described [
Ragno et al 2012,
Lorenzi et al 2017]. Although no large-scale studies have been published regarding kidney function in individuals with CADASIL, to date there is no evidence that kidney function is affected [
Bergmann et al 1996].
Long-term prognosis and causes of death. Onset of symptoms and overall survival may vary based on the type of pathogenic variant and its location within NOTCH3 (see Genotype-Phenotype Correlations).
Data on the long-term prognosis in CADASIL come from a large study of 411 individuals [Opherk et al 2004], which found that the median age at onset of inability to walk without assistance was approximately 60 years and the median age at which individuals became bedridden was 64 years. The median age at death was 68 years with a more rapid disease progression in men than in women. Pneumonia was the most frequent cause of death, followed by sudden unexpected death and asphyxia. In the final stages of disease, 78% of individuals were completely dependent and 63% were confined to bed.
The median survival time of men was significantly shorter than expected from German life tables, whereas the median survival time of women was not significantly reduced. The reason for this difference is not known; possible explanations include sex hormones, sex differences in risk factor control, medical management, social support, and socioeconomic factors.
Brain imaging. Imaging abnormalities in CADASIL evolve as the disease progresses [van den Boom et al 2003, Singhal et al 2005, Liem et al 2008a]:
In individuals age 20-30 years, distinctive white matter hyperintensities often first appear in the anterior temporal lobes, when the rest of the white matter, except for periventricular caps, appears unaffected [
Oberstein 2003,
van den Boom et al 2003].
In the course of the disease, the load of white matter hyperintensity lesions increases, eventually coalescing to the point where, in some elderly individuals, normal-appearing white matter is barely distinguishable [
Chabriat et al 1998].
White matter hyperintensities in the temporal lobe and external capsule are characteristic for CADASIL but not always present [
O'Sullivan et al 2001,
Markus et al 2002]. Involvement of the anterior temporal lobe is highly suggestive for CADASIL; this finding, however, is not sensitive or specific for the diagnosis of CADASIL [
Sureka &Jakkani 2012].
In symptomatic individuals, white matter hyperintensities are symmetrically distributed and located in the periventricular and deep white matter. Within the white matter, the frontal lobe is the site with the highest lesion load, followed by the temporal and parietal lobes [
Auer et al 2001,
O'Sullivan et al 2001].
The majority of lacunes develop at the edge of white matter hyperintensities and proximal to white matter hyperintensities along the course of perforating vessels supplying the respective brain region [
Duering et al 2013].
Brain atrophy appears to result from accumulation of lacunes and widespread microstructural alterations within the brain [
Jouvent et al 2007].
Cerebral microbleeds (CMB) are reported in approximately one third of affected individuals [
Puy et al 2017,
Nannucci et al 2018]. Cerebral microbleeds do not have a clear predominant location in individuals with CADASIL. In a study of 125 affected individuals, cerebral microbleeds were present in 34%. Of these, 29% had CMB in the deep subcortical region (most frequently in the thalamus), 22% in the lobar region (especially the temporal lobe), and 18% in the infratentorial region [
Nannucci et al 2018].
Other imaging studies. Positron emission tomography, transcranial Doppler sonography, and perfusion MRI may show decreased cerebral blood flow, decreased cerebral blood volume, impaired cerebral metabolism, decreased vasoreactivity, and altered neurovascular coupling [Tatsch et al 2003, Tuominen et al 2004, Huneau et al 2018, Moreton et al 2018].
Pathophysiology. Cerebral blood supply in individuals with CADASIL is reduced below demand, as demonstrated by an increased oxygen extraction rate in asymptomatic and demented individuals with CADASIL. Cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, and cerebral glucose utilization are significantly reduced [Bruening et al 2001, Tuominen et al 2004]. In addition, cerebral vasoreactivity is impaired [Pfefferkorn et al 2001], consistent with the observed degeneration of vascular smooth muscle cells in small arteries and arterioles [Kalimo et al 2002]. Increased fragility of cerebral microvessels is suggested by a high frequency of cerebral microbleeds at autopsy and on gradient echo MRI [Lesnik Oberstein et al 2001, Dichgans et al 2002].
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
Smaller studies have described genotype-phenotype correlations for specific pathogenic variants [Lesnik Oberstein et al 2001, Arboleda-Velasquez et al 2002, Opherk et al 2004, Bianchi et al 2010]; however, none of these associations have been firmly established.
In general, affected individuals with cysteine-altering pathogenic variants in epidermal growth-factor like repeat (EGFr) domains 1-6 of NOTCH3 have a 12-year earlier onset of stroke, lower survival, and increased white matter hyperintensity volume, consistent with the more severe classic CADASIL presentation, compared to those with a cysteine-altering pathogenic variant in EGFr domains 7-34. The mean survival time was 68.5 and 76.9 years, respectively [Rutten et al 2019].
There is conflicting evidence about the effect of pathogenic variants in the ligand-binding domain of NOTCH3 (EGFr domains 10 and 11). Both a more severe and a milder phenotype have been described in small series [Arboleda-Velasquez et al 2002, Monet-Leprêtre et al 2009, Rutten et al 2019] (see also Penetrance).
Biallelic pathogenic variants in NOTCH3 have been described in individuals with CADASIL [Tuominen et al 2001, Liem et al 2008b, Ragno et al 2013, Soong et al 2013, Vinciguerra et al 2014, Abou Al-Shaar et al 2016]. The phenotype of individuals with biallelic NOTCH3 pathogenic variants falls within the CADASIL spectrum.