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MYT1L Syndrome: a Rare Paediatric Genetic Syndrome Responsible for a Neurodevelopmental Disorder
Sponsor: University Hospital, Rouen
Summary
MYT1L syndrome is a rare genetic syndrome, recently described in 2011, with paediatric onset, responsible for a neurodevelopmental disorder combining psychomotor retardation, learning difficulties and/or intellectual development disorders, epilepsy, overweight and eating disorders. The Rouen genetics department is currently positioned as a clinical expert in this disease. The study published in 2020 by our team (Coursimault J et al., Hum Genet. 2022, PMID: 34748075) has enabled us to describe 40 new individuals worldwide, to gain a better understanding of this disease, to specify the genotype-phenotype relationships and to describe new clinical signs. We were able to confirm the presence of a neurodevelopmental disorder in 100% of patients, which includes: language delay, impaired orality, global and facial hypotonia, prosodic features and behavioural problems. This will be the first study in the world to characterise the neuropsychological, language and prosodic profiles of MYT1L patients.
Official title: Characterisation of Language and Prosody Disorders, Cognitive Functioning and Behavioural Problems in MYT1L Syndrome
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
6 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2025-02-04
Completion Date
2027-11-01
Last Updated
2025-06-06
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Patients with a genetic syndrome linked to the MYT1L gene
* Neuropsychological assessment by the neuropsychologist (lasting 1h30) * Speech and language assessment (including language and prosody) by the speech therapist, lasting 1h30
Patients with a neurodevelopmental disorder of genetic origin but not linked to MYT1L
Evaluation de la prosodie par l'orthophoniste (45 minutes)
Locations (1)
University Hospital of Rouen
Rouen, France