The multistep hypothesis of ALS revisited

  • Adriano Chiò
  • , Letizia Mazzini
  • , Sandra D'Alfonso
  • , Lucia Corrado
  • , Antonio Canosa
  • , Cristina Moglia
  • , Umberto Manera
  • , Enrica Bersano
  • , Maura Brunetti
  • , Marco Barberis
  • , Jan H. Veldink
  • , Leonard H. Van Den Berg
  • , Neil Pearce
  • , William Sproviero
  • , Russell McLaughlin
  • , Alice Vajda
  • , Orla Hardiman
  • , James Rooney
  • , Gabriele Mora
  • , Andrea Calvo
  • Ammar Al-Chalabi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) incidence rates are consistent with the hypothesis that ALS is a multistep process. We tested the hypothesis that carrying a large effect mutation might account for ≥1 steps through the effect of the mutation, thus leaving fewer remaining steps before ALS begins. Methods We generated incidence data from an ALS population register in Italy (2007-2015) for which genetic analysis for C9orf72, SOD1, TARDBP, and FUS genes was performed in 82% of incident cases. As confirmation, we used data from ALS cases diagnosed in the Republic of Ireland (2006-2014). We regressed the log of age-specific incidence against the log of age with least-squares regression for the subpopulation carrying disease-associated variation in each separate gene. Results Of the 1,077 genetically tested cases, 74 (6.9%) carried C9orf72 mutations, 20 (1.9%) had SOD1 mutations, 15 (1.4%) had TARDBP mutations, and 3 (0.3%) carried FUS mutations. In the whole population, there was a linear relationship between log incidence and log age (r 2 = 0.98) with a slope estimate of 4.65 (4.37-4.95), consistent with a 6-step process. The analysis for C9orf72-mutated patients confirmed a linear relationship (r 2 = 0.94) with a slope estimate of 2.22 (1.74-2.29), suggesting a 3-step process. This estimate was confirmed by data from the Irish ALS register. The slope estimate was consistent with a 2-step process for SOD1 and with a 4-step process for TARDBP. Conclusion The identification of a reduced number of steps in patients with ALS with genetic mutations compared to those without mutations supports the idea of ALS as a multistep process and is an important advance for dissecting the pathogenic process in ALS.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e635-e642
JournalNeurology
Volume91
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Aug 2018

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