Purpose: Heterozygous pathogenic variants in SPAST are known to cause Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia 4 (SPG4), the most common form of HSP, characterized by progressive bilateral lower limbs spasticity with frequent sphincter disorders. However, there are very few descriptions in the literature of patients carrying biallelic variants in SPAST.
Methods: Targeted Sanger sequencing, panel sequencing and exome sequencing were used to identify the genetic causes in 9 patients from 6 unrelated families with symptoms of HSP or infantile neurodegenerative disorder.
Results: We describe 5 patients with pure HSP with a variable age of onset, mostly in infancy, and 4 patients with profound intellectual disability and progressively worsening tetrapyramidal syndrome. The patients' parents, heterozygous carriers of pathogenic SPAST variants, included both asymptomatic carriers and patients with classic forms of SPG4.
Conclusion: Biallelic variants of SPAST may explain cases of hereditary spastic paraplegia with autosomal recessive inheritance. Furthermore, some biallelic variants may also cause psychomotor regression with an infantile neurodegenerative disorder, associated with a tetrapyramidal syndrome, a new phenotype associated with the SPAST gene.
Keywords: SPAST; SPG4; homozygous; neurodegenerative disorder; spastic paraplegia.
© 2024 The Author(s). European Journal of Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Neurology.