Familial Parkinson's Disease: A Clinical Genetic Analysis
Vincenzo Bonifati, Edito Fabrizio, Nicola Vanacore, Michele
De Mari and Giuseppe Meco

Abstract:
Objective: To study the frequency, clinical
features and clinical genetics of familial Parkinson's disease
(PD). Methods: Family history for PD and tremors
was studied in 100 consecutive PD cases. Spouses served as controls.
Clinical features were compared between personally verified
familial and sporadic PD cases, from the same consecutive clinical
series. Clinical genetic analysis was performed in a larger
group of non-consecutive multicase PD families. Results:
Family history for PD was positive in 24% of consecutive PD
cases and in 6% of spouse controls (p < 0.001). When family
history for isolated tremor is also considered, the number of
positive cases rises to 43% compared with 9% in controls (p
< 0.001). Nine of the consecutive cases had at least one
living affected relative, for a total of 20 familial PD cases.
These familial cases showed an earlier onset age when compared
with sporadic ones from the same consecutive series. Within
22 non-consecutive PD families with at least two living and
personally examined PD cases (total 52 PD cases), the crude
segregation ratios were similar for parents and siblings and
the lifetime cumulative risks approached 0.4 in siblings and
tended to be comparable, but at later ages, in parents. Ancestral
relatives were all unilaterally distributed. In some families,
anticipation of onset age in new generations was observed. Conclusions:
The frequency of positive family history for PD and for PD and
tremor is higher among PD cases than controls. Familial and
sporadic PD only differ in onset age. The clinical genetic analyses
support autosomal dominant inheritance with strongly age-related
penetrance as most likely in familial PD.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1995; 22: 272-279
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