Prevalence of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA mutations related to adult mitochondrial disease

GS Gorman, AM Schaefer, Y Ng, N Gomez… - Annals of …, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
GS Gorman, AM Schaefer, Y Ng, N Gomez, EL Blakely, CL Alston, C Feeney, R Horvath
Annals of neurology, 2015Wiley Online Library
Objective The prevalence of mitochondrial disease has proven difficult to establish,
predominantly as a result of clinical and genetic heterogeneity. The phenotypic spectrum of
mitochondrial disease has expanded significantly since the original reports that associated
classic clinical syndromes with mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) rearrangements and point
mutations. The revolution in genetic technologies has allowed interrogation of the nuclear
genome in a manner that has dramatically improved the diagnosis of mitochondrial …
Objective
The prevalence of mitochondrial disease has proven difficult to establish, predominantly as a result of clinical and genetic heterogeneity. The phenotypic spectrum of mitochondrial disease has expanded significantly since the original reports that associated classic clinical syndromes with mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) rearrangements and point mutations. The revolution in genetic technologies has allowed interrogation of the nuclear genome in a manner that has dramatically improved the diagnosis of mitochondrial disorders. We comprehensively assessed the prevalence of all forms of adult mitochondrial disease to include pathogenic mutations in both nuclear and mtDNA.
Methods
Adults with suspected mitochondrial disease in the North East of England were referred to a single neurology center from 1990 to 2014. For the midyear period of 2011, we evaluated the minimum prevalence of symptomatic nuclear DNA mutations and symptomatic and asymptomatic mtDNA mutations causing mitochondrial diseases.
Results
The minimum prevalence rate for mtDNA mutations was 1 in 5,000 (20 per 100,000), comparable with our previously published prevalence rates. In this population, nuclear mutations were responsible for clinically overt adult mitochondrial disease in 2.9 per 100,000 adults.
Interpretation
Combined, our data confirm that the total prevalence of adult mitochondrial disease, including pathogenic mutations of both the mitochondrial and nuclear genomes (≈1 in 4,300), is among the commonest adult forms of inherited neurological disorders. These figures hold important implications for the evaluation of interventions, provision of evidence‐based health policies, and planning of future services. Ann Neurol 2015 Ann Neurol 2015;77:753–759
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