Defining the landscape of TIA1 and SQSTM1 digenic myopathy
Paula Panos-Basterra,Julian Theuriet,Aleksandra Nadaj-Pakleza,...Antoine Pegat,Tanya Stojkovic,Gorka Fernández-Eulate
TIA1/SQSTM1 myopathy is one of the few digenic myopathies. We describe four new French adult male patients carrying the TIA1 p.Asn357Ser and SQSTM1 p.Pro392Leu variant and review the literature to include 20 additional cases to define the spectrum of the disease. These twenty-four patients (75% males) had late-onset (52,6 ± 10,1 years), mainly asymmetric, distal ankle and hand finger extension weakness (75%), mild CK elevation (82.4%) and myopathic EMG. Two of the four French patients had sensorimotor axonal polyneuropathy and an additional one had neurogenic changes in muscle biopsy. Muscle biopsy showed rimmed vacuoles (44.4%), myofibrillar disorganization (16.7%) or both (38.9%), with P62/TDP43 aggregates. The TIA1 p.Asn357Ser variant was present in all patients and the SQSTM1 p.Pro392Leu was the most frequent (71%) of the four reported SQSTM1 variants. We reviewed the distal myopathy gene panels of Pitié-Salpêtrière's hospital cohort finding a prevalence of 11/414=2.7% of the TIA1 p.Asn357Ser variant, with two patients having an alternative diagnosis (TTN and MYH7) with atypical phenotypes, resembling some of the features seen in TIA1/SQSTM1 myopathy. Overall, TIA1/SQSTM1 myopathy has a homogenous phenotype reinforcing the pathogenicity of its digenic variants. We confirm an increased burden of the TIA1 p.Asn357Ser variant in distal myopathy patients which could act as a genetic modifier.