The survival motor neuron (SMN) gene is present in two copies on chromosome 5q13 and the evidence is now compelling that mutations in the telomeric copy (SMNt) of the gene underlie childhood onset proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). There is a correlation between the number of centromeric SMN gene copies (SMNc) and the clinical severity of the disease but this relationship is not absolute. Allelic variants of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene encoded on chromosome 19q are known to influence the prognosis and risk in a number of neurological disorders. We have therefore genotyped 166 unrelated cases of SMA to determine whether the presence of specific APOE genotypes correlates with severity of disease. The study failed to show the influence of any particular APOE genotype on disease severity, with specifically APOE epsilon4 being no more common in the milder SMA forms and APOE epsilon2 not over represented in type I SMA. A limited study of 23 SMA families also failed to show any influence of APOE genotype on SMA disease severity. Factors other than APOE genotype must therefore be responsible for determining SMA disease severity.