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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Amyloid angiopathy: a heterogeneous entity
- Aß cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)
- Boston Criteria v2.0 for sporadic CAA
- Aß amyloid angiopathy
- APP gene and Aß peptide production
- Deposit sites in CAA and AD
- Pathophysiology
- APP autosomal dominant pathogenic variants
- Six APP pathogenic variants primarily leading to CAA
- Presentation of six APP pathogenic variants
- Dutch variant – HCHWA-D type
- Other APP pathogenic variants primarily leading to CAA
- Increased APP copy number
- APP duplication
- APP duplication leading to APP overexpression
- Clinical and radiological data in APP duplication
- French series of 43 patients (24 families)
- High inter- and intra-family heterogeneity
- Genotype-phenotype correlation
- CAA and Down syndrome
- APP triplication within a family with CAA + AD
- Mutation in the 3’ untranslated region of APP
- Autosomal dominant pathogenic variants
- CAA and PSEN1 pathogenic variants
- CAA and PSEN2 pathogenic variants
- Aß amyloid angiopathy (1)
- APOE4 and APOE2 genotype
- Aß amyloid angiopathy (2)
- And when it is not the Aß peptide?
- CAA and cystatin C
- CAA and gelsolin – Finnish form
- CAA and transthyretin
- Take-home messages
Topics Covered
- Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)
- Boston Criteria
- Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)
- APP gene and Aβ peptide production
- Pathogenic variants
- Genotype-phenotype correlation
- Down syndrome
- CAA and PSEN1
- CAA and PSEN2
- APOE4 and APOE2 genotype
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Grangeon, L. (2024, March 31). Hereditary cerebral amyloid angiopathy [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/NZVX8084.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- There are no commercial/financial matters to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy (CAA)
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello. My name is Lou
Grangeon and I work as
a Neurologist at the Rouen
University Hospital in France.
My PhD was about genetics in
cerebral amyloid angiopathy.
Indeed, in this lecture,
we are going to talk about
hereditary forms of cerebral
amyloid angiopathy.
I have no conflict of interest
in this presentation.
0:28
When we speak of cerebral
amyloid angiopathy,
or CAA, we're actually talking
about an extremely
heterogeneous entity.
In all cases, there
is an accumulation of
a substance known as amyloid
in the vascular wall,
but this may be of
different types with different
peptides accumulating.
The most common form is amyloid
angiopathy with A-Beta
peptide accumulation.
But there are other
very rare forms,
all hereditary with autosomal
dominant inheritance,
in which other peptides
can accumulate.
This is the case, for instance,
with transthyretin,
cystatin C, gelsolin, etc.
These angiopathies can
present in a variety of ways,
with cognitive impairment
at the forefront,
whether or not there is
associated Alzheimer's disease.
But the second main
presentation is
hemorrhagic with recurrent
spontaneous lobar hematomas.
Other clinical
presentations exist,
such as inflammatory forms.
When we come to
the various causes
or susceptibility factors,
we need to distinguish between
acquired forms, meaning
iatrogenic forms,
which have been described
in recent years,
and concern early onset very
severe forms in patients who
several decades
earlier had undergone
neurosurgery
involving grafting of
dura mater of cadaveric origin,
or growth hormone, mainly
of cadaveric origin.
Apart from these
very rare forms,
we speak of non-acquired forms,
and we distinguish between
the most frequent
form of late onset.
These are sporadic cases
in elderly subjects.
We are not looking
for a genetic cause
with mutation directly
responsible for the disease,
but rather for risk factors,
each of which confers
a low to moderate risk of
developing the disease.
To date, only the
APOE genotype is
known to be a risk
factor for CAA.
In cases of early onset,
whether familial or sporadic,
meaning with only one
affected subject in a family,
we'll be looking for
a genetic cause where
a mutation within a gene is
directly responsible
for the pathology.
At present, only autosomal
dominant inheritance
has been described,
and the only gene known
to be involved in
A-Beta CAA is the APP gene.
In the event of accumulation
of other peptides,
we'll be looking
at the TTR gene,
which includes transthyretin,
or the GSN gene which includes
gelsolin for instance.