Ethnic Differences in Atypical Parkinsonism—is South Asian PSP Different?

Author:

Balint Bettina12ORCID,Neo Shermyn13ORCID,Magrinelli Francesca1ORCID,Mulroy Eoin1,Latorre Anna1ORCID,Stamelou Maria45,Morris Huw R.1ORCID,Batla Amit1ORCID,Bhatia Kailash P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology London UK

2. Department of Neurology University Hospital Zurich and University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

3. Department of Neurology National Neuroscience Institute Singapore Singapore

4. Parkinson and Movement Disorders Department HYGEIA Hospital Athens Greece

5. European University of Cyprus Nicosia Cyprus

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundProgressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a progressive atypical parkinsonian condition that results in severe disability. There are few studies of PSP in patients of non‐white European ancestry.ObjectivesWe aim to perform deep phenotyping in a South Asian PSP cohort to uncover possible ethnic differences in disease characteristics.MethodsConsecutive PSP patients had their clinical records reviewed for clinical features operationalized in the Movement Disorder Society (MDS)‐PSP diagnostic criteria and relevant investigations, including imaging and genetic tests. Clinical variables were summarized by descriptive statistics and Kaplan–Meier curves were generated for survival analysis.ResultsTwenty‐seven patients, comprising Indians (78%), Pakistanis (11%) and Sri Lankans (11%) were included. Mean age of symptom onset was 63.8 ± 7.0 years and 22% of patients had an early age of onset (<60 years). The most common presenting symptom was parkinsonism (56%), followed by cognitive dysfunction (37%), falls (33%) and dysarthria (26%). The predominance types at final review were distributed across PSP‐RS (67%), PSP‐PGF (15%), PSP‐P (15%) and PSP‐F (4%). Atypical clinical features like cerebellar signs (33%), REM‐sleep behavior disorder (RBD) (55%), visual hallucinations (22%), and a family history of parkinsonism (20%) were evident in a proportion of patients.ConclusionsWe present a South Asian cohort of PSP patients with a higher than previously reported percentages of early‐onset disease, family history and atypical clinical manifestations. These patients do not fit easily into the PSP phenotypes defined by the current MDS criteria. Dedicated clinicopathological and genetic tests are needed in this population to dissect the pathogenesis of clinically‐defined PSP.

Publisher

Wiley

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