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Andrea Cortese, Maike F Dohrn, Riccardo Curro, Sara Negri, Petra Lassuthova, Chiara Pisciotta, Stefano Tozza, Abdullah Al-Ajmi, Changyoung Feng, Pedro J Tomaselli, Gorka Fernandez-Eulate, Saif Haddad, Matilde Laurà, Alexander M Rossor, Elisa Vegezzi, Stefano Facchini, James N Sleigh, Adriana Rebelo, Danique Beijer, Jacquelyn Raposo, Mario Saporta, Barbora Lauerova, Helena F Pernice, Pascal Achenbach, Ulrike Schöne, Tayir Alon, Marcus Deschauer, Isabell Cordts, Carolin D Obermaier, Natalie Winter, Peter D Creigh, Janet E Sowden, Tyler Rehbein, Stefania Magri, Alessandro Bertini, Paola Saveri, Paolo Ripellino, Jingyu Huang, Aleksandra Nadaj-Pakleza, Alison Ross, James K L Holt, Kathryn M Brennan, Rivka Sukenik-Halevy, Varoona Bizaoui, Yesim Parman, Esra Battaloglu, Arman Cakar, Hadil Alrohaif, Simon Hammans, Kishore R Kumar, Marina L Kennerson, Hülya Kayserili, Defne A Amado, Katrin Hahn, Paola Valentino, Francesca Cavalcanti, Carlo Gaetano, Franco Taroni, Geir J Braathen, Henry Houlden, Tanya Stojkovic, Stojan Peric, Alessandra Bolino, Stefano C Previtali, Yi-Chung Lee, Ayşe N Başak, Sherifa A Hamed, Ricardo Rojas-Garcia, Kristl G Claeys, Wilson Marques, Teresa Sevilla, Beate Schlotter-Weigel, Fiore Manganelli, Ruxu Zhang, David N Herrmann, Steven S Scherer, Pavel Seeman, Davide Pareyson, Mary M Reilly, Michael E Shy, Stephan Züchner, Inherited Neuropathy Consortium, Genotype and phenotype spectrum of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease due to mutations in SORD, Brain, 2025;, awaf021, https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaf021
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Abstract
Biallelic loss-of-function mutations in the sorbitol dehydrogenase (SORD) gene cause the most common recessive type of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), CMT-SORD. However, the full genotype-phenotype spectrum and progression of the disease remain to be defined. Notably, a multicenter phase 2/3 study to test the efficacy of govorestat (NCT05397665), a new aldose reductase inhibitor, is currently ongoing. Diagnosing CMT-SORD will become imperative when disease-modifying therapies become available.
In this cross-sectional multicentre study, we identified 144 patients from 126 families, including 99 males (69%) and 45 females (31%). Patients represented multiple ancestries, including European, Hispanic, Chinese, Near Eastern, and Northern African. We confirmed c.757delG (p.Ala253GlnfsTer27) as the most common pathogenic allele, followed by c.458C>A (p.Ala153Asp), while other variants were identified mostly in single cases. The average sorbitol level in CMT-SORD patients was significantly higher compared to controls and heterozygous carriers, independently from serum storage duration, sex, or variant type. Two-thirds of cases were diagnosed with CMT2 while one-third had distal hereditary motor neuropathy (dHMN). Disease onset was usually in the second decade of life. Although foot dorsiflexion was the most affected muscle group, dorsal and plantar flexion had a similar degree of weakness in most cases (difference of Medical Research Council score ≤ 1). One fourth of patients used ankle foot orthoses, usually in their 30s, but most patients maintained independent ambulation later in life. Nerve conduction studies (NCS) were suggestive of a motor predominant axonal neuropathy, with reduced conduction velocities in the intermediate range in one fourth of the cases. Sensory conductions in the upper limbs appeared more frequently affected than in the lower limbs. Foot dorsiflexion and plantar flexion decreased significantly with age. Male sex was significantly associated with the severity of distal lower limb weakness (plantar flexion) and a larger change over time (dorsiflexion).
In conclusion, CMT-SORD is a frequent recessive form of axonal, motor predominant CMT, with prominent foot dorsiflexion and plantar flexion involvement. Fasting serum sorbitol is a reliable biomarker of the condition that can be utilized for pathogenicity assessment of identified rare SORD variants.
Author notes
Andrea Cortese, Maike F. Dohrn and Riccardo Curro contributed equally to this work.
- alleles
- phenotype
- charcot-marie-tooth disease
- mutation
- nerve conduction study
- aldehyde reductase
- ankle
- asthenia
- biological markers
- fasting
- genes
- genotype
- heterozygote
- hispanics or latinos
- motor and sensory-neuropathy type ii, hereditary
- l-iditol 2-dehydrogenase
- multicenter studies
- sorbitol
- european continental ancestry group
- arm
- leg
- neuritis, motor
- dorsiflexion of foot
- ambulation
- conduction velocity
- inherited neuropathies
- medical research
- axonal neuropathy
- pathogenicity
- lower extremity paresis
- foot orthosis
- plantar flexion
- loss of function mutation
- north african people