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Influenza-Associated Acute Necrotizing Encephalopathy in US Children

,; Silverman, Andrew; Walsh, Rachel; Santoro, Jonathan D; Thomas, Katherine; Ballinger, Elizabeth; Fisher, Kristen S; Thomas, Ajay X; Appavu, Brian; Kruer, Michael C; Neilson, Derek; Knoll, Jasmine; Sharp, April N; Edelman, Hannah E; Otallah, Scott; Morgan, Alexandra; Grzezulkowska, Aniela; Nguyen, John; Rao, Lekha M; Hecht, Shaina M; Catalano, Laura; Daigle, Hunter; Kronfol, Catherine; Wharton, Jessica; Adams, David; Kalawi, Adam Z; Kung, Michael; Arellano, Janetta L; Smith, Lauren; Segal, Devorah; Feja, Kristina; Broomall, Eileen; Jayakar, Anuj; Arnold, Sandra R; Retallack, Hanna; Press, Craig A; Gombolay, Grace; McLaughlin, Madeleine H; Kannan, Varun; Thakkar, Kavita; Rezwan, Tasmia; Hulfish, Erin; Eid, Dalia; Meylor, Jennifer; Peng, Diane; Hurtado, Ryan; Nickerson, Taylor; Mandell, Iris; Carbonell, Abigail U; Kerner-Rossi, Mallory; Jayaraman, Divya; Davis, Mallory; Olivero, Rosemary; Shah, Neel; Osborne, Christina M; Zhang, Bo; Cortina, Christopher; Randolph, Adrienne G; Rao, Suchitra; LaRocca, Thomas; Van Haren, Keith P; Wilson-Murphy, Molly
IMPORTANCE/UNASSIGNED:Acute necrotizing encephalopathy (ANE) is a rare, but severe, neurologic condition for which epidemiologic and management data remain limited. During the 2024-2025 US influenza season, clinicians at large pediatric centers anecdotally reported an increased number of children with influenza-associated ANE, prompting this national investigation. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To understand the clinical presentation, interventions, and outcomes among US children diagnosed with influenza-associated ANE. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:This study was a multicenter case series of children diagnosed with ANE with longitudinal follow-up. A call for cases was issued via academic societies, public health agencies, and by directly contacting pediatric specialists at 76 US academic centers, requesting cases between October 1, 2023, and May 30, 2025. Inclusion criteria required acute encephalopathy with radiologic evidence of acute thalamic injury and laboratory confirmation of influenza infection in individuals aged 21 years or younger. EXPOSURE/UNASSIGNED:Influenza-associated ANE. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:Presenting symptoms, vaccination history, laboratory and genetic findings, interventions, and clinical outcomes, including modified Rankin Scale score (0: no symptoms; 1-2: mild disability; 3-5: moderate to severe disability; 6: death), length of stay, and functional outcomes. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Of 58 submitted cases, 41 cases (23 females; median age, 5 years [IQR, 2-8]) from 23 US hospitals met inclusion criteria. Thirty-one cases (76%) had no significant medical history; 5 (12%) were medically complex. Clinical presentation included fever in 38 patients (93%), encephalopathy in 41 (100%), and seizures in 28 (68%). Thirty-nine patients (95%) had influenza A (14 with A/H1pdm/2009, 7 with A/H3N2, and 18 with no subtype) and 2 had influenza B. Laboratory deviations included elevated liver enzymes (78%), thrombocytopenia (63%), and elevated cerebrospinal fluid protein (63%). Among 32 patients (78%) with genetic testing, 15 (47%) had genetic risk alleles potentially related to risk of ANE including 11 (34%) with RANBP2 variants. Among 38 patients with available vaccination history, only 6 (16%) had received age-appropriate seasonal influenza vaccination. Most patients received multiple immunomodulatory treatments, including methylprednisolone (95%), intravenous immunoglobulin (66%), tocilizumab (51%), plasmapheresis (32%), anakinra (5%), and intrathecal methylprednisolone (5%). Median intensive care unit and hospital lengths of stay were 11 days (IQR, 4-19) and 22 days (IQR, 7-36), respectively. Eleven patients (27%) died a median of 3 days (IQR, 2-4) from symptom onset, primarily from cerebral herniation (91%). Among the 27 survivors with 90-day follow-up, 63% had at least moderate disability (modified Rankin Scale score ≥3). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE/UNASSIGNED:In this case series of children with influenza-associated ANE from the 2 most recent influenza seasons in the US, the condition was associated with high morbidity and mortality in this cohort of predominantly young and previously healthy children. The findings emphasize the need for prevention, early recognition, intensive treatment, and standardized management protocols.
PMID: 40736730
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 5903492

Tectal gliomas as a rare finding in presumed idiopathic congenital aqueductal stenosis: patient series

Jandhyala, Nora R; Negash, Bruck; Garcia, Mekka R; Allen, Jeffrey; Wisoff, Jeffrey H; Segal, Devorah
BACKGROUND:Small tectal gliomas (TGs) may be unrecognized at initial diagnosis of noncommunicating hydrocephalus, with the etiology typically attributed to idiopathic congenital aqueductal stenosis (CAS). There are 2 published cases of TGs found on follow-up imaging after treatment with endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV). The authors investigated for this phenomenon in a large cohort of patients with TG or CAS treated with ETV or CSF shunting. OBSERVATIONS/METHODS:The authors reviewed records at their institution from 1999 to 2024, identifying 10 patients initially diagnosed with presumed idiopathic CAS and later found to have underlying TG. Of these, 7 were younger than 1 year of age at hydrocephalus presentation. The median time from CAS to glioma diagnosis was 13 months. Reasons for repeat imaging that identified glioma included postoperative surveillance and recurrent hydrocephalus. Five (50%) lesions grew over follow-up, and 2 required chemotherapy. LESSONS/CONCLUSIONS:The authors describe the eventual emergence of TG as a probable cause of hydrocephalus in a cohort of patients initially diagnosed with CAS. As most of these cases were identified incidentally on interval imaging to evaluate adequate function of CSF diversion procedures, follow-up imaging to evaluate for tectal expansion should be considered in children, particularly infants, with a new diagnosis of idiopathic CAS. https://thejns.org/doi/10.3171/CASE24695.
PMCID:12305356
PMID: 40720906
ISSN: 2694-1902
CID: 5903102

Causes of Diplopia, Strabismus Patterns, and Ocular Motor Features in Patients With Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 27B

Gold, Daniel R; Bery, Anand K; Moukheiber, Emile; Mu, Weiyi; Abreu, Nicolas J; Fein, Alexander S; Steigerwald, Connolly G; Rucker, Janet C
BACKGROUND:Spinocerebellar ataxia type 27 B (SCA27B) caused by GAA trinucleotide repeats in the fibroblast growth factor 14 gene is emerging as a common cause of late-onset ataxia. Oscillopsia due to downbeat nystagmus (DBN) and diplopia are common symptoms, yet the causes of diplopia and strabismus patterns are poorly defined. METHODS:Retrospective chart review of 18 patients diagnosed with SCA27B over the past year. RESULTS:Ten of 18 patients had episodic or persistent oscillopsia or diplopia at disease onset, neurologically isolated in 4. Seventeen had detectable DBN, although it was often delayed in onset and was clinically obvious in only 5. Diplopia was present in 14 patients: vertical due to skew deviation (static and or alternating on lateral gaze) (n = 8) and/or horizontal due to vergence dysfunction (n = 11). Symptomatic vergence dysfunction included convergence insufficiency (CI) (n = 4) and divergence insufficiency (n = 5). Thirteen of 16 patients experienced improvement in oscillopsia or imbalance on 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). CONCLUSIONS:Strabismus patterns causing diplopia in patients with SCA27B are, not unexpectedly, largely attributable to cerebellar dysfunction and are not unique to SCA27B. The exceptions to cerebellar localization were CI, sixth nerve palsy, and slow saccades. Careful assessment for DBN in patients presenting with episodic or persistent diplopia from skew deviation or vergence disorders is important, as this may be key to confirming a cerebellar localization, subtle on examination, and guide toward genetic testing and 4-AP treatment.
PMID: 40693779
ISSN: 1536-5166
CID: 5901412

Coenzyme Q headgroup intermediates can ameliorate a mitochondrial encephalopathy

Shi, Guangbin; Miller, Claire; Kuno, Sota; Rey Hipolito, Alejandro G; El Nagar, Salsabiel; Riboldi, Giulietta M; Korn, Megan; Tran, Wyatt C; Wang, Zixuan; Ficaro, Lia; Lin, Tao; Spillier, Quentin; Gamallo-Lana, Begoña; Jones, Drew R; Snuderl, Matija; Song, Soomin C; Mar, Adam C; Joyner, Alexandra L; Sillitoe, Roy V; Banh, Robert S; Pacold, Michael E
Decreased brain levels of coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), an endogenously synthesized lipophilic antioxidant1,2, underpin encephalopathy in primary CoQ10 deficiencies3,4 and are associated with common neurodegenerative diseases and the ageing process5,6. CoQ10 supplementation does not increase CoQ10 pools in the brain or in other tissues. The recent discovery of the mammalian CoQ10 headgroup synthesis pathway, in which 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase-like protein (HPDL) makes 4-hydroxymandelate (4-HMA) to synthesize the CoQ10 headgroup precursor 4-hydroxybenzoate (4-HB)7, offers an opportunity to pharmacologically restore CoQ10 synthesis and mechanistically treat CoQ10 deficiencies. To test whether 4-HMA or 4-HB supplementation promotes CoQ10 headgroup synthesis in vivo, here we administered 4-HMA and 4-HB to Hpdl-/- mice, which model an ultra-rare, lethal mitochondrial encephalopathy in humans. Both 4-HMA and 4-HB were incorporated into CoQ9 and CoQ10 in the brains of Hpdl-/- mice. Oral treatment of Hpdl-/- pups with 4-HMA or 4-HB enabled 90-100% of Hpdl-/- mice to live to adulthood. Furthermore, 4-HB treatment stabilized and improved the neurological symptoms of a patient with progressive spasticity due to biallelic HPDL variants. Our work shows that 4-HMA and 4-HB can modify the course of mitochondrial encephalopathy driven by HPDL variants and demonstrates that CoQ10 headgroup intermediates can restore CoQ10 synthesis in vivo.
PMID: 40634618
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 5890992

The Spectrum of Neurologic Phenotypes Associated With NUS1 Pathogenic Variants: A Comprehensive Case Series

Brooker, Sarah M; Novelli, Maria; Coukos, Robert; Prakash, Neha; Kamel, Walaa A; Amengual-Gual, Marta; Anheim, Mathieu; Barcia, Giulia; Bardakjian, Tanya; Baur, Franciska; Berweck, Steffen; Bölsterli, Bigna K; Brugger, Melanie; Cassini, Thomas; Chatron, Nicolas; Corner, Brian; Dafsari, Hormos Salimi; de Sainte Agathe, Jean-Madeleine; Ellis, Colin A; Ezell, Kimberly M; Foucard, Cendrine; Frucht, Steven J; Garcia, Maria C; Gill, Deepak; Guimier, Anne; Hamid, Rizwan; Heine-Suñer, Damià; Herkenrath, Peter; Hully, Marie; Isaias, Ioannis U; Januel, Louis; Laurencin, Chloe; Laut, Taylor; Lavillaureix, Alinoe; Lesca, Gaetan; Lesieur-Sebellin, Marion; Magistrelli, Luca; Marelli, Cecilia; Mefford, Heather C; Mendelsohn, Bryce A; Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet; Miller, Claire; Mohammad, Shekeeb S; Morgante, Francesca; Nandipati, Sirisha; Opladen, Thomas; Padmanaban, Mahesh; Pauni, Micaela; Pezzoli, Gianni; Piton, Amelie; Ramond, Francis; Riboldi, Giulietta M; Rougeot-Jung, Christelle; Santos-Simarro, Fernando; Scheffer, Ingrid E; Serari, Naoual; Stahl, Christine M; Kung, Ann Stembridge; Tarongí Sanchez, Susana; Thauvin-Robinet, Christel; Till, Marianne; Tranchant, Christine; Troedson, Christopher; Tropea, Thomas F; Vanakker, Olivier; Vega, Patricia; Wiese, Maxi Leona; Wieshmann, Udo; Williams, Laura J; Wirth, Thomas; Zech, Michael; Zempel, Hans; Roze, Emmanuel; Leuzzi, Vincenzo; Galosi, Serena; Fung, Victor S C; Carvill, Gemma; Krainc, Dimitri; Gerard, Elizabeth; Mencacci, Niccolò E
OBJECTIVE:A growing body of evidence indicates a strong genetic overlap between developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) and movement disorders. De novo loss-of-function variants in NUS1 have been recently identified in DEE cases. Herein, we report a large cohort of cases with pathogenic NUS1 variants and describe their clinical presentation and the details of the associated epilepsy and movement disorders. METHODS:Cases with NUS1-related disorders were identified through a multicentric international collaboration made possible by the GeneMatcher platform. Clinical data were acquired through retrospective case-note review. RESULTS:We identified 41 subjects carrying 38 different pathogenic or likely pathogenic heterozygous NUS1 variants. The majority of cases displayed developmental delays and intellectual disability of variable severity. Epilepsy was present in 68.3% of cases (28/41) with onset typically in early childhood. Strikingly, 87.8% of cases (36/41) presented with movement disorders and for 13 of these cases the movement disorder was not accompanied by epilepsy. The phenomenology of the movement disorders was complex with myoclonus observed in 68.3% of cases (28/41), either in isolation or in combination with dystonia, ataxia, and/or parkinsonism. Seven cases that otherwise did not have prominent movement disorders had mild incoordination and intention tremor, suggestive of cerebellar dysfunction. There was no observed genotype-phenotype correlation, suggesting that other genetic or acquired factors impact the clinical presentation. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:Heterozygous NUS1 pathogenic variants cause a complex neurological disorder, variably featuring developmental and epileptic encephalopathies and a broad spectrum of movement disorders, which represent the major source of neurological disability for most cases. ANN NEUROL 2025.
PMCID:12221205
PMID: 40590478
ISSN: 1531-8249
CID: 5887702

Radiographic and visual response to the type II RAF inhibitor tovorafenib in children with relapsed/refractory optic pathway glioma in the FIREFLY-1 trial

Nysom, Karsten; Kilburn, Lindsay B; Leary, Sarah E S; Landi, Daniel B; de Vos-Kerkhof, Evelien; Perreault, Sébastien; Witt, Olaf; Ziegler, David S; Hernáiz Driever, Pablo; Franson, Andrea T; Baxter, Patricia A; Whipple, Nicholas S; Kline, Cassie; Segal, Devorah; Jabado, Nada; Bailey, Simon; McCowage, Geoffrey; Hansford, Jordan R; Khuong-Quang, Dong-Anh; Gottardo, Nicholas G; Hassall, Timothy; Han, Jung Woo; Yalon Oren, Michal; Chi, Susan N; Qiu, Jiaheng; Da Costa, Daniel; Govinda Raju, Sandya; Manley, Peter; Hargrave, Darren
BACKGROUND:Due to their anatomical locations, optic pathway gliomas (OPGs) can rarely be cured by resection. Given the importance of preserving visual function, we analyzed radiological and visual acuity (VA) outcomes for the type II RAF inhibitor tovorafenib in the OPG subgroup of the phase 2 FIREFLY-1 trial. METHODS:FIREFLY-1 investigated the efficacy (arm 1, n=77), safety, and tolerability (arms 1/2) of tovorafenib (420 mg/m2 once weekly; 600 mg maximum) in patients with BRAF-altered relapsed/refractory pediatric low-grade glioma (pLGG). In this post hoc analysis, anti-tumor activity and VA were analyzed in arm 1 patients with OPG. Anti-tumor activity was independently assessed per Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology high-grade glioma (RANO-HGG), Response Assessment in Pediatric Neuro-Oncology-LGG (RAPNO) and RANO-LGG criteria. The data cutoff was June 5, 2023. RESULTS:Forty-two of 77 patients had OPGs; 35 of 42 had ≥2 VA assessments. The overall response rate in the OPG subgroup according to RANO-HGG, RAPNO and RANO-LGG criteria were 64%, 50%, and 55%, with clinical benefit rates 95%, 88%, and 90%, respectively. VA per patient was preserved for 80% of patients; 31% demonstrated improved VA; VA per eye was preserved in 87%, with 27% improving. The safety profile in the arm 1 OPG subgroup was similar to the overall FIREFLY-1 safety analysis set. CONCLUSIONS:Tovorafenib demonstrated anti-tumor activity in relapsed/refractory BRAF-altered OPG across radiological assessment criteria and was generally well tolerated. Importantly, vision remained stable or improved in most patients.
PMID: 39700439
ISSN: 1523-5866
CID: 5764762

Autism and intellectual disability due to a novel gain-of-function mutation in UBE3A

Gunelson, Anna M; Kim, Kwang-Soo; Steigerwald, Connolly G; Segal, Devorah; Abreu, Nicolas J; Yi, Jason J
The loss of maternal UBE3A causes Angelman syndrome whereas its duplication is associated with a heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorder. Here, we describe two affected brothers who possess a novel UBE3AL734S variant that is not present in two neurotypical siblings. The UBE3AL734S variant was confirmed to be maternally inherited, and the affected individuals exhibited early global developmental delay, ongoing learning difficulties, and autistic features. Their phenotypes were inconsistent with Angelman syndrome. Biochemical characterization showed the UBE3AL734S variant causes a dramatic increase in the activity of the UBE3A enzyme, suggesting that a gain in UBE3A activity is the driver of neurodevelopmental disease. Our observations document an emerging class of neurodevelopmental disorders caused by gain-of-function mutations in UBE3A.
PMID: 40316779
ISSN: 1435-232x
CID: 5834632

Further delineation of the SCAF4-associated neurodevelopmental disorder

Schmid, Cosima M; Gregor, Anne; Ruiz, Anna; Manso Bazús, Carmen; Herman, Isabella; Ammouri, Farah; Kotzaeridou, Urania; McNiven, Vanda; Dupuis, Lucie; Steindl, Katharina; Begemann, Anaïs; Rauch, Anita; Suter, Aude-Annick; Isidor, Bertrand; Mercier, Sandra; Nizon, Mathilde; Cogné, Benjamin; Deb, Wallid; Besnard, Thomas; Haack, Tobias B; Falb, Ruth J; Müller, Amelie J; Linden, Tobias; Haldeman-Englert, Chad R; Ockeloen, Charlotte W; Mattioli, Francesca; Reymond, Alexandre; Ibrahim, Nazia; Naz, Shagufta; Lacaze, Elodie; Bassetti, Jennifer A; Hoefele, Julia; Brunet, Theresa; Riedhammer, Korbinian M; Elloumi, Houda Z; Person, Richard; Zou, Fanggeng; Kahle, Juliette J; Cremer, Kirsten; Schmidt, Axel; Delrue, Marie-Ange; Almeida, Pedro M; Ramos, Fabiana; Srivastava, Siddharth; Quinlan, Aisling; Robertson, Stephen; Manka, Eva; Kuechler, Alma; Spranger, Stephanie; Nowaczyk, Malgorzata J M; Elshafie, Reem M; Alsharhan, Hind; Hillman, Paul R; Dunnington, Leslie A; Braakman, Hilde M H; McKee, Shane; Moresco, Angelica; Ignat, Andrea-Diana; Newbury-Ecob, Ruth; Banneau, Guillaume; Patat, Olivier; Kuerbitz, Jeffrey; Rzucidlo, Susan; Sell, Susan S; Gordon, Patricia; Schuhmann, Sarah; Reis, André; Halleb, Yosra; Stoeva, Radka; Keren, Boris; Al Masseri, Zainab; Tümer, Zeynep; Hammer-Hansen, Sophia; Krüger Sølyst, Sofus; Steigerwald, Connolly G; Abreu, Nicolas J; Faust, Helene; Müller-Nedebock, Amica; Tran Mau-Them, Frédéric; Sticht, Heinrich; Zweier, Christiane
While mostly de novo truncating variants in SCAF4 were recently identified in 18 individuals with variable neurodevelopmental phenotypes, knowledge on the molecular and clinical spectrum is still limited. We assembled data on 50 novel individuals with SCAF4 variants ascertained via GeneMatcher and personal communication. With detailed evaluation of clinical data, in silico predictions and structural modeling, we further characterized the molecular and clinical spectrum of the autosomal dominant SCAF4-associated neurodevelopmental disorder. The molecular spectrum comprises 25 truncating, eight splice-site and five missense variants. While all other truncating variants were classified as pathogenic/likely pathogenic, significance of one C-terminal truncating variant, one splice-site variant and the missense variants remained unclear. Three missense variants in the CTD-interacting domain of SCAF4 were predicted to destabilize the domain. Twenty-three variants occurred de novo, and variants were inherited in 13 cases. Frequent clinical findings were mild developmental delay with speech impairment, seizures, and skeletal abnormalities such as clubfoot, scoliosis or hip dysplasia. Cognitive abilities ranged from normal IQ to severe intellectual disability (ID), with borderline to mild ID in the majority of individuals. Our study confirms the role of SCAF4 variants in neurodevelopmental disorders and further delineates the associated clinical phenotype.
PMID: 39668183
ISSN: 1476-5438
CID: 5763052

NDUFS8-Related Leigh Syndrome Mimicking a Leukodystrophy

Hogue, Bailyn; Garcia, Mekka R; Steigerwald, Connolly G; Borja, Maria J; Abreu, Nicolas J
Leigh syndrome is a progressive infantile neurodegenerative disorder of mitochondrial metabolism that often leads to decompensation in the setting of metabolic stress. It is genetically heterogenous with varied inheritance patterns. One subtype includes NDUFS8-related autosomal recessive Leigh syndrome. This nuclear gene encodes a complex I subunit of the mitochondrial complex chain. Although Leigh syndrome is typically associated with basal ganglia and brainstem involvement, cases of confluent white matter disease have been described with NDUFS8-related disorders. We present the case of a 6-month-old girl with initial imaging suggestive of a leukodystrophy, later found to have a novel homozygous variant in NDUFS8. In conjunction with the clinical course, a diagnosis of Leigh syndrome was made. This case highlights that mitochondrial disorders should be considered on the differential for confluent cerebral white matter disease in early childhood.
PMID: 40239028
ISSN: 1708-8283
CID: 5828302

Author Correction: The type II RAF inhibitor tovorafenib in relapsed/refractory pediatric low-grade glioma: the phase 2 FIREFLY-1 trial

Kilburn, Lindsay B; Khuong-Quang, Dong-Anh; Hansford, Jordan R; Landi, Daniel; van der Lugt, Jasper; Leary, Sarah E S; Driever, Pablo Hernáiz; Bailey, Simon; Perreault, Sébastien; McCowage, Geoffrey; Waanders, Angela J; Ziegler, David S; Witt, Olaf; Baxter, Patricia A; Kang, Hyoung Jin; Hassall, Timothy E; Han, Jung Woo; Hargrave, Darren; Franson, Andrea T; Yalon Oren, Michal; Toledano, Helen; Larouche, Valérie; Kline, Cassie; Abdelbaki, Mohamed S; Jabado, Nada; Gottardo, Nicholas G; Gerber, Nicolas U; Whipple, Nicholas S; Segal, Devorah; Chi, Susan N; Oren, Liat; Tan, Enrica E K; Mueller, Sabine; Cornelio, Izzy; McLeod, Lisa; Zhao, Xin; Walter, Ashley; Da Costa, Daniel; Manley, Peter; Blackman, Samuel C; Packer, Roger J; Nysom, Karsten
PMID: 40240838
ISSN: 1546-170x
CID: 5828422