Clinical Description
SLC39A8-CDG is characterized by a severe, primarily neurologic phenotype with developmental delay, intellectual disability, muscular hypotonia, and variable additional neurologic symptoms including dyskinetic movements and spasticity. To date, 15 individuals have been identified with pathogenic variants in SLC39A8 [Boycott et al 2015, Park et al 2015, Riley et al 2017, Park et al 2020, Bonaventura et al 2021]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Table 2.
SLC39A8-CDG: Frequency of Select Features
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Feature | Proportion of Persons w/Feature | Comment |
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Developmental delay / intellectual disability | 15/15 | |
Hypotonia | 15/15 | Truncal postural hypotonia |
Feeding difficulties | 14/15 | |
Movement disorder | 15/15 | Dyskinetic movements |
Spasticity | 9/15 | Variable (mild to severe) |
Epilepsy | 9/15 | |
Growth deficiency | 3/15 | |
Ophthalmologic manifestations | 14/15 | Strabismus, cortical blindness |
Hearing impairment | 3/15 | |
Developmental delay (DD) and intellectual disability (ID). All known individuals exhibit varying degrees of DD and subsequent ID. Milestones of motor development are typically reached with major delays, although some are never reached. Most older individuals have severe ID that does not allow for standardized testing. Communication is usually limited to single words and/or gestures.
Other neurodevelopmental features
Hypotonia. All described individuals presented with truncal muscular hypotonia, often more pronounced in early life. Head control is reduced but can be achieved in more mildly affected individuals.
Infant feeding difficulties. Feeding difficulties necessitating at least transient tube feeding are common in individuals with SLC39A8-CDG.
Movement disorders, especially marked dystonia, were reported in several individuals, at times overlapping with spasticity and thus resulting in spastic dystonia.
Spasticity to varying degrees has been observed in several affected individuals, correlating with a more severe disease course.
Reduced nerve conduction velocities, both motor and sensory, have been reported in several individuals with SLC39A8-CDG.
Epilepsy. The majority of reported individuals suffer from seizures, with onset in the first months of life. Some individuals have relatively mild well-controlled seizures. However, severely affected individuals often present with infantile epileptic spasms and hypsarrhythmia unresponsive to intense treatment including corticosteroids. Manganese treatment was associated with improved seizure control in singular case reports [Park et al 2018].
Growth. Poor weight gain with subsequent growth deficiency is a common feature of SLC39A8-CDG. While not all individuals have short stature at birth, many develop proportionate or disproportionate short stature with short limbs during childhood. Head size can be reduced, although this is not a consistent or common feature.
Ophthalmologic involvement. Strabismus has been described in the vast majority of affected individuals. Loss of vision has been identified, although it can be attributed to cortical blindness in some individuals. No specific ophthalmologic abnormalities have been described, but such manifestations cannot be ruled out based on the limited number of described individuals.
Hearing impairment. Sensorineural hearing impairment of variable severity has been observed in some individuals with SLC39A8-CDG and was typically detected on newborn hearing screen.
Liver disease. Elevated liver enzymes are routinely observed, although not usually clinically significant (e.g., resulting in liver failure). Treatment for liver disease is rarely required but might be indicated on an individual basis. Treatment response is poorly characterized.
Osteopenia. Osteopenia is frequently observed in affected individuals. Whether this is a primary manifestation of SLC39A8-CDG or secondary due to disuse is unclear.
Prognosis. The overall prognosis is highly variable. To date, three of the reported 15 individuals are deceased due to secondary complications of infections accompanied by exacerbations of seizures. In contrast, two mildly affected individuals diagnosed in adulthood have a stable phenotype without a progressive neurologic disorder [J Park, personal communication].