4.7 Article

Child Neurology: Reversible Dementia in an 18-Year-Old Woman Due to Undiagnosed Cobalamin-G Deficiency A Case Report

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 2, Pages E215-E219

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207146

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Cobalamin-G deficiency is a rare inborn error of metabolism that affects the utilization of vitamin B12, leading to various neurological symptoms. This case report describes an 18-year-old woman with progressive dementia and encephalopathy, whose diagnosis of cobalamin-G deficiency was confirmed by genetic and biochemical testing. Treatment with leucovorin, betaine, and B12 injections resulted in a gradual improvement in cognitive function. This report highlights the importance of considering cobalamin-G deficiency in cases of dementia in young adults.
Cobalamin-G deficiency is an inborn error of metabolism which disrupts the biochemical utilization of vitamin B12 to covert homocysteine to methionine in the remethylation pathway. Typically, affected patients present within the first year of life with anemia, developmental delay, and metabolic crisis. Few case reports of cobalamin-G deficiency reference a later onset phenotype primarily defined by neuropsychiatric symptoms. We report an 18-year-old woman who presented with a 4-year history of progressively worsening dementia, encephalopathy, epilepsy, and regression of adaptive functioning, with an initially normal metabolic workup. Whole-exome sequencing identified variants in the MTR gene, suspicious for cobalamin-G deficiency. Additional biochemical testing after genetic testing supported this diagnosis. Since treatment with leucovorin, betaine, and B12 injections, we have seen a gradual return to normal cognitive function. This case report expands the phenotypic range of cobalamin-G deficiency and offers rationale for genetic and metabolic testing in cases of dementia in the second decade of life.

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