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PI4KA-related disorder: gene reviews article

PI4KA-related disorder: gene reviews article
PI4KA-related disorder: gene reviews article
Clinical characteristics: PI4KA-related disorder is a clinically variable disorder characterized primarily by neurologic dysfunction (limb spasticity, developmental delay, intellectual disability, seizures, ataxia, nystagmus), gastrointestinal manifestations (multiple intestinal atresia, inflammatory bowel disease), and combined immunodeficiency (leukopenia, variable immunoglobulin defects). Age of onset is typically antenatal or in early childhood; individuals can present with any combination of these features. Rare individuals present with later-onset hereditary spastic paraplegia. Brain MRI findings can include hypomyelinating leukodystrophy, cerebellar hypoplasia/atrophy, thin or dysplastic corpus callosum, and/or perisylvian polymicrogyria.

Diagnosis/testing: The diagnosis of PI4KA-related disorder is established in a proband with characteristic features and biallelic PI4KA pathogenic variants identified by molecular genetic testing.

Management
Treatment: Individualized care by a multidisciplinary team; physical therapy, occupational therapy, mobility aids, and medical management as needed for limb spasticity and motor issues; speech-language therapy for speech impairment and/or dysphagia; communication aids as needed; educational support for intellectual disability; anti-seizure medication as needed for seizures; gastrostomy as needed for feeding issues; treatments for multiple intestinal atresia and inflammatory bowel disease per surgeon and gastroenterologist; treatment of immunodeficiency per immunologist; standard treatment for hearing and vision issues.
Surveillance: Neurologic, developmental, and gastrointestinal assessments annually or as needed; consider complete blood count and inflammatory markers annually or as indicated by symptomatology; endoscopy as needed; monitor for increased susceptibility to infection; annual audiology and ophthalmology evaluations throughout childhood.

Genetic counselling: PI4KA-related disorder is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. If both parents are known to be heterozygous for a PI4KA pathogenic variant, each sib of an affected individual has at conception a 25% chance of being affected, a 50% chance of being an asymptomatic carrier, and a 25% chance of inheriting neither of the familial pathogenic variants. Once the PI4KA pathogenic variants have been identified in an affected family member, carrier testing for at-risk relatives and prenatal and preimplantation genetic testing are possible.
Baple, E.L.
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Salter, C
fd214de9-a3f8-4db7-93e5-64d399182975
Uhlig, H
bc402e9b-c7a2-4231-913c-51d69eafaa81
Wolf, N.I.
ed015fda-8a36-46dd-8ac2-24f478c213a0
Crosby, A.H.
77beb58b-455a-41be-a27e-66f896fe06af
Baple, E.L.
d9397ade-5f7a-4211-a4a1-fdfd1daf5c90
Salter, C
fd214de9-a3f8-4db7-93e5-64d399182975
Uhlig, H
bc402e9b-c7a2-4231-913c-51d69eafaa81
Wolf, N.I.
ed015fda-8a36-46dd-8ac2-24f478c213a0
Crosby, A.H.
77beb58b-455a-41be-a27e-66f896fe06af

Baple, E.L., Salter, C, Uhlig, H, Wolf, N.I. and Crosby, A.H. (2022) PI4KA-related disorder: gene reviews article.

Record type: Other

Abstract

Clinical characteristics: PI4KA-related disorder is a clinically variable disorder characterized primarily by neurologic dysfunction (limb spasticity, developmental delay, intellectual disability, seizures, ataxia, nystagmus), gastrointestinal manifestations (multiple intestinal atresia, inflammatory bowel disease), and combined immunodeficiency (leukopenia, variable immunoglobulin defects). Age of onset is typically antenatal or in early childhood; individuals can present with any combination of these features. Rare individuals present with later-onset hereditary spastic paraplegia. Brain MRI findings can include hypomyelinating leukodystrophy, cerebellar hypoplasia/atrophy, thin or dysplastic corpus callosum, and/or perisylvian polymicrogyria.

Diagnosis/testing: The diagnosis of PI4KA-related disorder is established in a proband with characteristic features and biallelic PI4KA pathogenic variants identified by molecular genetic testing.

Management
Treatment: Individualized care by a multidisciplinary team; physical therapy, occupational therapy, mobility aids, and medical management as needed for limb spasticity and motor issues; speech-language therapy for speech impairment and/or dysphagia; communication aids as needed; educational support for intellectual disability; anti-seizure medication as needed for seizures; gastrostomy as needed for feeding issues; treatments for multiple intestinal atresia and inflammatory bowel disease per surgeon and gastroenterologist; treatment of immunodeficiency per immunologist; standard treatment for hearing and vision issues.
Surveillance: Neurologic, developmental, and gastrointestinal assessments annually or as needed; consider complete blood count and inflammatory markers annually or as indicated by symptomatology; endoscopy as needed; monitor for increased susceptibility to infection; annual audiology and ophthalmology evaluations throughout childhood.

Genetic counselling: PI4KA-related disorder is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. If both parents are known to be heterozygous for a PI4KA pathogenic variant, each sib of an affected individual has at conception a 25% chance of being affected, a 50% chance of being an asymptomatic carrier, and a 25% chance of inheriting neither of the familial pathogenic variants. Once the PI4KA pathogenic variants have been identified in an affected family member, carrier testing for at-risk relatives and prenatal and preimplantation genetic testing are possible.

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More information

Published date: 12 August 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507545
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507545
PURE UUID: 9e3e6b16-20f0-49f6-afb5-bff02756865d
ORCID for C Salter: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2494-1644

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Dec 2025 17:53
Last modified: 12 Dec 2025 03:08

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Contributors

Author: E.L. Baple
Author: C Salter ORCID iD
Author: H Uhlig
Author: N.I. Wolf
Author: A.H. Crosby

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