Clinical Description
Infantile-onset spinocerebellar ataxia (IOSCA) was originally described in individuals of Finnish descent who had biallelic pathogenic founder variants in TWINK. Individuals with this genotype were described as having the classic features on which clinical diagnostic criteria are based. However, affected individuals from multiple ethnicities who have pathogenic variants in TWINK that are different from the original founder variant have now been described. Clinical features in these individuals have expanded the phenotype of IOSCA. These affected individuals are sometimes referred to as having "atypical IOSCA." However, IOSCA represents a continuum in which the clinical differences between affected individuals are due to the underlying pathogenic variants in TWINK (see Genotype-Phenotype Correlations).
Classic infantile-onset spinocerebellar ataxia (IOSCA) is a severe, progressive neurodegenerative disorder [Koskinen et al 1994b]. Affected children are born after an uneventful pregnancy and develop normally until age one year, when the first clinical symptoms of ataxia, muscle hypotonia, loss of deep-tendon reflexes, and athetosis appear. Ophthalmoplegia and sensorineural deafness develop by school age (age 7 years). By adolescence sensory axonal neuropathy, optic atrophy, and hypergonadotropic hypogonadism in females become evident. Migraine, psychiatric symptoms, and epilepsy are late manifestations.
By adolescence affected individuals are no longer ambulatory, being dependent on either a walker or wheelchair. The hearing deficit is severe (>100 dB) and communication relies on sign language. Progressive pes cavus foot deformity and neurogenic scoliosis are common, as well as autonomic nervous system dysfunction, which manifests as increased perspiration, difficulty with urination and/or urinary incontinence, and obstipation.
The supratentorial brain (i.e., cerebral cortex, cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, and other deep brain nuclei) is well preserved until the onset of epilepsy. In 15 children, epilepsy developed into a serious encephalopathy, beginning at ages two and four years in those who were compound heterozygotes for the Finnish founder variant and another pathogenic variant, and between ages 15 and 34 years (mean age 24 years) in homozygotes for the Finnish founder variant. The seizures were myoclonic jerks or focal clonic seizures that progressed to epilepsia partialis continua and further to status epilepticus with loss of consciousness and tonic-clonic seizures. Death of nine of these 15 individuals was directly or indirectly related to epilepsy. The oldest individual (without epilepsy) who is homozygous for the Finnish founder variant is alive at age 50 years.
Atypical IOSCA. The clinical course is more rapid and severe in individuals with certain genotypes (see Genotype-Phenotype Correlations) and is characterized by severe early-onset encephalopathy and signs of liver involvement. The clinical manifestations include hypotonia, athetosis, sensory neuropathy, ataxia, hearing deficit, ophthalmoplegia, intractable epilepsy, and elevation of serum transaminases. The liver may show mtDNA depletion, whereas the muscle mtDNA is only slightly affected.
Neuroimaging. The supratentorial findings of cortical edema and later cortical and central atrophy appear at the time of and after the onset of epilepsy. The cortical edema is of a nonvascular distribution. The area of swollen cortex varied from multiple small lesions to the involvement of the whole hemisphere, thalamus, and caudate nucleus. In diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), the lesions showed restricted diffusion, thus behaving like early ischemic changes. Some of these lesions were reversible, but a T1-weighted hyperintense cortical signal compatible with cortical laminar necrosis developed in individuals with recurrent status epilepticus. Supratentorial cortical and central atrophy was seen in all individuals with intractable status epilepticus, but not in children or adults without refractory epilepsy. Epileptic encephalopathy in IOSCA is similar to that seen in other mitochondrial disorders, including MELAS.
Spinocerebellar degeneration progresses gradually with increasing age. Serial brain MRI imaging reveals cerebellar, cortical, and brain stem atrophy with increased signal intensity in the cerebellar white matter on T2-weighted images [Koskinen et al 1995b].
Neuropathology. Postmortem studies show moderate brain stem and cerebellar atrophy and severe atrophic changes in the dorsal roots, posterior columns, and posterior spinocerebellar tracts of the spinal cord [Koskinen et al 1994a, Lönnqvist et al 1998].