Clinical Description
The cardinal clinical feature of spastic paraplegia 4 (SPAST-HSP) is insidiously progressive bilateral lower-limb spasticity associated with brisk reflexes, ankle clonus, and bilateral extensor plantar responses. Sphincter disturbances are very frequent (77%), in particular urinary urgency and incontinence. Increased reflexes in the upper limbs may also occur (65%), but other symptoms and findings in the upper limbs are rare. A frequent additional feature is decreased, but not abolished, vibration sense at the ankles, occurring in 60% of individuals [Parodi et al 2018]. Around 50% of affected individuals have proximal weakness in the lower limbs [Kanavin & Fjermestad 2018, Parodi et al 2018, Schneider et al 2019].
Age at onset of symptoms ranges from infancy to the eighth decade. Age at onset is variable even among family members with the same pathogenic variant. A recent study including more than 500 individuals with SPAST-HSP confirmed that the age at onset is characterized by a bimodal distribution, with a major first peak before the first decade, and a second, lower one between the third and fifth decades. Penetrance is not complete; an estimated 6% of individuals remain asymptomatic throughout life. Penetrance is reported to be lower in females than in males [Parodi et al 2018].
Disease severity generally worsens with the duration of the disease, although some individuals remain mildly affected all their lives. Disease severity is variable even among family members with the same pathogenic variant. After long disease duration (20 years), approximately 50% of individuals need assistance for walking, and approximately 10% require a wheelchair. Disease progression is more rapid in individuals with late onset (age >35 years) than in those with early onset [Loureiro et al 2013, Chrestian et al 2016, Polymeris et al 2016, Parodi et al 2018].
Comparing men and women, Parodi et al [2018] observed that symptomatic females more often had increased upper-limb reflexes than males, representing a more severe and diffused disorder in women.
Leg spasms are frequent and may also develop before the onset of spasticity. Spasms are more frequent after physical activity, and tend to disappear when spasticity becomes more severe.
Bladder dysfunction remains one of the most frequent problems for affected individuals and may be more frequent in individuals with SPAST-HSP than in all individuals with HSP; Schneider et al [2019] reported urologic involvement in 91.2% of individuals with SPAST-HSP compared to 74.5% of individuals with HSP. The most frequent symptoms are urinary incontinence, hesitancy, increased frequency of micturition, and urgency. Incomplete bladder emptying may also occur [Braschinsky et al 2010]. The anal sphincter may also be affected, resulting in uncontrollable flatulence or fecal incontinence, affecting respectively 31.4% and 8.7% of individuals with HSP in one study [Kanavin & Fjermestad 2018]. In a study of urodynamic findings in 29 individuals with HSP, Fourtassi et al [2012] described signs of central neurogenic bladder in 82.7%, with detrusor overactivity in 52% and detrusor sphincter dyssynergia in 65.5%.
Pes cavus and mild spastic dysarthria may be observed.
Subtle cognitive impairment has been documented [Erichsen et al 2009b]; but its relation to the disease remains undetermined. Cognitive deficits appear late in the disease course and are not present in all affected members of a given family. When detected by neuropsychological testing, the impairment is often subtle, limited to executive dysfunction, and without noticeable effect on daily living. No definite correlation with the type of pathogenic variant in SPAST has been established.
Extensive neuropsychological assessment of nine adults with SPAST-HSP (including one asymptomatic individual) identified cognitive impairment fulfilling multidomain non-amnesic mild cognitive impairment criteria, with executive impairment and impaired social cognition [Chamard et al 2016] as suggested by Tallaksen et al [2003], where a familial aggregation of cognitive impairment suggested the implication of modifiers. In the large SPAST-HSP study by Parodi et al [2018], intellectual disability was described in 4.2%.
Other findings compatible with a complex form of HSP are uncommon in SPAST-HSP but do not exclude the diagnosis. Also, whether these additional findings are related to SPAST-HSP or coincidental remains to be clarified.
Neuropathy has been reported in individuals with SPAST-HSP, but without compelling evidence of a shared underlying pathologic mechanism. Kumar et al [2012] found peripheral abnormalities in nerve conduction studies in two of 11 individuals with SPAST-HSP.
Non-motor symptoms are more frequent than previously acknowledged. Servelhere et al [2016] studied 30 individuals and found that fatigue, pain, and depression were frequent and often severe manifestations in individuals with SPAST-HSP.
Restless legs syndrome has been associated with SPAST-HSP [Sperfeld et al 2007], but this remains to be confirmed.
Hand tremor was reported in 10% of a large cohort of Dutch individuals with SPAST-HSP [de Bot et al 2010].
Seizures, intellectual disability, and cerebellar ataxia are rare. A few individuals with severe dementia have been reported [Murphy et al 2009]. However, too few neuropathologic studies have been performed in persons with SPAST-HSP for a general picture of the distribution of cortical and medullar lesions in the disease to emerge.
Neuroimaging. Newer MRI studies using advanced neuroimaging techniques have shown widespread involvement of gray and white matter in individuals with SPAST-HSP [Lindig et al 2015, Rezende et al 2015, Liao et al 2018, Rucco et al 2019]. In a study of 11 individuals, fractional anisotropy was reduced in the corticospinal tracts, cingulate gyri, and splenium of the corpus callosum [Rezende et al 2015]. Resting-state fMRI studies in 12 individuals with SPAST-HSP showed abnormal functional activity in several brain areas [Liao et al 2018]. Rucco et al [2019] performed magnetoencephalography of ten individuals with SPAST-HSP and described global network rearrangements. Using diffusion tensor imaging and tract-based special statistics, Lindig et al [2015] found that imaging findings in the 15 included individuals correlated with disease duration and severity.
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
Recently, after analyzing a cohort of more than 500 individuals with SPAST-HSP, Parodi et al [2018] showed that missense variants were associated with an earlier age of onset (by 10 years), when compared to truncating variants. This finding provides an explanation for the bimodal age of onset distribution typical of SPAST-HSP.
It is important to note that age at onset and clinical severity are highly variable for a given variant, even in the same family. The observed difference in age of onset between related individuals ranged from 27 years to 69 years [Parodi et al 2018]. Furthermore, two family members with the same variant can have in one case a pure spastic paraparesis and in the other a complex disease. For example, Orlacchio et al [2004] reported wide phenotypic variability with the p.Asn386Ser variant, with some individuals presenting with intellectual disability and others showing brain MRI abnormalities including thin corpus callosum or cerebellar atrophy.
The most plausible explanation for intra and interfamilial variability is the presence of genetic modifiers. Svenson et al [2004] reported two rare nonsynonymous SPAST variants, c.131C>T (p.Ser44Leu) and c.134C>A (p.Pro45Gln) acting as age-of-onset modifiers. In several analyzed families, the individuals who had a SPAST pathogenic variant on one allele and either a c.131C>T or c.134C>A variant on the other allele (in trans) had a very early onset, suggesting that these alleles could modify the HSP phenotype [Svenson et al 2004, McDermott et al 2006, personal communication]. The SPAST variant c.131C>T has a frequency of 0.4% in a control population, c.134C>A is even more rare in the gnomAD Database (see bioRxiv). In addition to the two SPAST variants, an HSPD1 variant was proposed as a SPAST-HSP age-at-onset modifier [Svenstrup et al 2009], but its role remains under discussion.