Uncovering genetic mimics in multiple sclerosis: A single-center clinical exome sequencing study

Mult Scler J Exp Transl Clin. 2024 Jul 24;10(3):20552173241263491. doi: 10.1177/20552173241263491. eCollection 2024 Jul-Sep.

Abstract

Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) shares clinical/radiological features with several monogenic diseases that can mimic MS.

Objective: We aimed to determine if exome sequencing can identify monogenic diseases in patients diagnosed with MS according to the McDonald criteria thus uncovering them as being misdiagnosed.

Methods: We performed whole exome sequencing in a cohort of 278 patients with MS, clinically or radiologically isolated syndrome without cerebrospinal fluid-specific oligoclonal bands (CSF-OCBs) (n = 228), a positive family history of MS (n = 44), or both (n = 6), thereby focusing on individuals potentially more likely to have underlying monogenic conditions mimicking MS. We prioritized 495 genes associated with monogenic diseases sharing features with MS.

Results: A disease-causing variant in NOTCH3 was identified in one patient without CSF-OCBs, no spinal lesions, with non-response to immunotherapy, and a family history of dementia, thereby converting the diagnosis to cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL). Moreover, 18 patients (6.5% of total) carried variants of unclear significance.

Conclusion: Monogenic diseases being misdiagnosed as MS seem rare in patients diagnosed with MS according to the McDonald criteria, even in CSF-OCB negative cases. The detected pathogenic NOTCH3 variant emphasizes CADASIL as a rare differential diagnosis and highlights the relevance of genetic testing in selected MS cases with atypical presentations.

Keywords: CADASIL; Multiple sclerosis; exome sequencing; genetic mimic; genetic testing; misdiagnosis.