Clinical Description
To date, 28 individuals from six families have been identified with a pathogenic variant in TTBK2 [Houlden et al 2007, Bauer et al 2010, Lindquist et al 2017, Deng et al 2020]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Table 2.
Clinical Features of Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 11
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Feature | Number of Persons w/Feature | Comment |
---|
Cerebellar ataxia
| 28/28 | Variable truncal &/or gait ataxia |
Limb ataxia
| 21/28 | |
Dysarthria
| 22/28 | |
Jerky pursuit
| 18/28 | |
Nystagmus
| 20/28 | |
Ophthalmoplegia
| 2/28 | |
Diplopia
| 4/28 | |
Hyperreflexia
| 18/28 |
|
Extrapyramidal
features
| 1/28 | Laterocollis "No-no" head tremor
|
Onset. In the six families described with spinocerebellar ataxia type 11 (SCA11), age of onset ranged from age nine years in the family of Danish origin to age 40-50 years in the families from France, Germany, and China. Most individuals present with a pure ataxia phenotype, with few additional features. Abnormal eye findings were identified in a third of individuals, a small proportion of whom presented with diplopia at onset.
Ataxia. The cerebellar ataxia was clinically similar in all six families. All individuals presented with an ataxia-predominant disorder and difficulty walking due to unsteadiness and maintaining balance. In approximately a third of individuals, limb ataxia was also present. Ataxia was usually slowly progressive. For example, in the British family described, the mean disease duration was 26.8 years [Houlden et al 2007].
Abnormal eye findings include jerky pursuit and horizontal and vertical nystagmus. All of the individuals with SCA11 from Devon had abnormal eye movements at presentation, with jerky pursuit and vertical nystagmus more prevalent than horizontal nystagmus [Houlden et al 2007]. Half of the individuals with vertical nystagmus had an upbeat nystagmus [Giunti et al 2012]. Only a very small proportion were found to be symptomatic with ophthalmoplegia and diplopia. No members of the French family had abnormal eye findings. One individual in the German family had oculomotor disturbances with jerky pursuit, gaze-evoked nystagmus, dysmetric saccades, and impaired optokinetic nystagmus on presentation, nine years after symptom onset [Bauer et al 2010]. In the Danish family, one individual presented with diplopia and nystagmus at age nine years [Lindquist et al 2017]. A sib presented at age four years with ataxia and was found to have nystagmus at age nine years [Lindquist et al 2017]. Three individuals of Chinese descent had nystagmus at the time of presentation [Deng et al 2020]. It is unclear if abnormal eye findings progress, but ocular symptoms were the only presenting feature for one individual out of 28 affected. Although abnormal eye findings may be seen at the time of presentation, they are rarely symptomatic.
Pyramidal features exist in varying degrees across the different families. In the British family, mild limb hyperreflexia more prevalent in the upper than the lower limbs (with negative Babinski sign) was found in all but one affected individual [Houlden et al 2007]. In the family from Pakistan, mild-to-moderate hyperreflexia was observed in only two of five affected individuals [Houlden et al 2007]. Only one of the three individuals affected from the Danish family had hyperreflexia [Lindquist et al 2017]. Two of the five individuals of Chinese descent had hyperreflexia [Deng et al 2020]. Reflexes and tone were, however, normal in the German and French families described [Bauer et al 2010].
No other pyramidal signs apart from hyperreflexia were observed in the 28 individuals apart from one individual with upgoing plantar reflexes. This individual from Devon presented with both extrapyramidal and pyramidal signs including spastic gait, hyperreflexia with upgoing plantar reflexes, "no-no" head tremor, and upper-limb tremor with laterocollis [Giunti et al 2012]. No extrapyramidal signs have been described in other individuals.
Bulbar symptoms. Dysarthria and swallowing difficulties are common in individuals with SCA11. Dysarthria as a result of cerebellar dysfunction was moderate to severe in almost all individuals in the families of British and Pakistani origin but was not present at diagnosis [Houlden et al 2007]. In the French family, dysarthria was an early feature [Bauer et al 2010]. Dysarthria was reported to be progressive in individuals in the family of Chinese origin [Deng et al 2020]. Liquid dysphagia was also noted in individuals with SCA11, especially in the families from Devon and China, but was not common at presentation.
Peripheral neuropathy is not a common feature of SCA11. In the British cohort, nerve conduction studies (NCS) and electromyography (EMG) were normal in eight affected subjects [Houlden et al 2007]. One other affected subject had slightly small sensory nerve action potentials at the age of 61 (disease duration 43 years) but without clinically manifesting neuropathy. In the Pakistani, Danish, French, and German families, neuropathy was not seen. In the Chinese family, EMG of the proband showed extensive neurogenic damage. Somatosensory evoked potentials of the lower limbs were abnormal. Generalized neurogenic damage was seen on NCS and EMG of two other affected Chinese individuals, but it is not apparent whether these individuals also presented with neuropathy symptoms clinically.
Other. One individual from Devon presented with laterocollis [Giunti et al 2012]. Dystonia has not been described in other individuals.
Prognosis. SCA11 is slowly progressive with severity ranging from very mild balance problems at disease onset, to severe speech and swallowing problems and ataxia requiring the use of a wheelchair. In affected individuals from the British and Pakistani families, eight of 17 persons required a wheelchair 20 to 30 years after onset. The same was reported in the French and German families, where progression of disease is slow; individuals remained active many years and required a wheelchair decades after onset [Bauer et al 2010]. Life span in individuals with SCA11 is normal; many affected individuals live beyond age 75 years. In nine individuals from the British and Pakistani families, death occurred between ages 55 and 88 years.
Neuroimaging. Brain MRI examination shows mild-to-severe atrophy in both cerebellar hemispheres and the vermis. The brain stem and cerebrum were normal in most individuals [Giunti et al 2012]. Occasionally, atrophy has also been described in the medulla but this was not associated with disease severity [Giunti et al 2012, Deng et al 2020]. In a Danish proband, an 18Ffluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography scan showed reduced metabolic activity in the cerebellum and pons, and repeat brain MRI four years later showed worsening cerebellar atrophy with olivopontine atrophy [Lindquist et al 2017].
Neuropathology. Neuropathologic examination of the brain of one affected individual showed marked cerebellar and brain stem loss with Purkinje cell degeneration and abnormal tau deposition in the brain stem and cortex [Houlden et al 2007].