CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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eIF2B-related multisystem disorder in two sisters with atypical presentations.

BACKGROUND: Vanishing white matter disease (VWM) is a chronic progressive leukoencephalopathy that is characterized by cerebellar ataxia and spasticity, together with cystic degeneration of the cerebral white matter as evidenced by brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Here, we report two sisters with EIF2B2 variants, who presented with delayed development and failure to thrive before 1 year of age, developed cataracts, and showed diffuse leukoencephalopathy.

CASE PRESENTATION: The index case had a history of hepatomegaly and intermittent vomiting after upper respiratory infection at 11 months of age. Her older brothers had died at an early age, one with similar symptoms and the other because of septic shock. Her older sister had similar presenting symptoms; she later suffered from both cataracts and primary amenorrhea, but showed neurological improvement. Her follow-up MRIs (at 21 years of age) revealed progressive diffuse brain atrophy with leukoencephalopathy, without cystic rarefaction. Whole-exome sequencing of the index case revealed the presence of the compound heterozygous variants, Val85Glu and Met226Lys in EIF2B2. The affected sister had the same compound heterozygous variants, and their unaffected parents were heterozygous carriers of each variant.

CONCLUSIONS: This study expanded the clinical and genetic spectrum of VWM with EIF2B2 variants. It would be better to consider VWM as an eIF2B-related multisystem disorder, not just as a neurological disorder, on the basis that this is a family of housekeeping genes that affect multiple organs.

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