Characterization of Childhood Neurodegeneration and Associated Ataxia in UBTF-Related Disorder
Amanda Nagy1, Anna Luddy1, Francine Molay1, Lizbeth De la Rosa Abreu1, Catherine Becker1, Anoopum Gupta2, Florian Eichler1
1Massachusetts General Hospital, 2Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham, Harvard
Objective:

To clarify the natural history of neurodegeneration related to a heterozygous missense de novo mutation in the upstream binding transcription factor (UBTF) gene and to understand the movement patterns extracted from continuous wrist and ankle accelerometer data.

Background:

UBTF-related childhood-onset neurodegeneration is characterized by a period of typical or mildly delayed development followed by regression. Affected individuals frequently experience movement disorders, including ataxia.

Design/Methods:

An online REDCap survey of families of patients with a pathogenic variant in UBTF was conducted. Between March 2021 and February 2022, 52 surveys were started. Duplicate and incomplete responses were excluded. Ten unique responses were fully submitted, and these were included for analysis.

 

Patients with UBTF-related disorder evaluated in a neurogenetics clinic were enrolled for data collection using wearable wrist and ankle accelerometers. Longitudinal data during typical daily activities was collected remotely for continuous one-week periods. These findings were compared to similar data collected from patients with Ataxia-Telangiectasia (A-T) and control subjects. Motor activity was compared with clinical severity using the Brief Ataxia Rating Scale (BARS).

Results:

Median age of the survey subjects was 12.5 years (range 5-20 years), with symptom onset at a median of 2.5 years. All participants reported motor regression (median 3.75 years at onset), with 90% reporting ataxia.

 

Motor activity data was collected from 5 participants (median age 12 years, range 8-12 years), with 3 timepoints included for one participant (2 with wrist data only) and 1 timepoint for the other 4 participants. Data from both sensors had high test-retest reliability. Motor activity showed similarities to A-T over controls across multiple measures and correlated with BARS scores.

Conclusions:

Ataxia is frequent in UBTF-related disorder. Motor activity data collected via wrist and ankle accelerometers is a highly reliable measure correlated to disease severity with results resembling other hereditary ataxias, indicating potential use as a motor biomarker.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000203593