# A307 NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY & MOTILITY CAID (CHRONIC ATRIAL AND INTESTINAL DYSRHYTHMIA) SYNDROME: A SEVERE LATE-ONSET PEDIATRIC INTESTINAL PSEUDO-OBSTRUCTION

**Authors:** l adouane, P Poinsot, J Castilloux, C Faure

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/jcag/gwad061.307 · Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology · 2024-02-14

## TL;DR

This study describes a rare genetic condition called CAID syndrome, caused by SGOL1 mutations, which leads to severe intestinal and heart issues in children.

## Contribution

The paper identifies SGOL1 mutations as a new cause of late-onset pediatric intestinal pseudo-obstruction with cardiac dysrhythmia.

## Key findings

- CAID syndrome is a severe, late-onset form of pediatric intestinal pseudo-obstruction caused by SGOL1 mutations.
- Patients with SGOL1 mutations often require parenteral nutrition and ileostomy due to intestinal failure.
- Sinus dysfunction and cardiac pacemaker implantation are common in these patients.

## Abstract

Pediatric intestinal pseudo-obstruction (PIPO) is a rare, heterogeneous and severe gut motility disorder. It is associated with a high morbidity and mortality rate. The etiology of PIPO can be either primary (sporadic or familial), secondary or idiopathic. In primary forms, 50 to 75% of patients will present symptoms in the first month of life and 80% by the end of the first year of life. In 2014, Chetaille et al. described the CAID syndrome related to a recessive SGOL1 mutation as a new form of PIPO associated with cardiac dysrhythmia.

Our aim is to describe the clinical presentation and the specific digestive and nutritional features of pediatric patients with SGOL1 mutation.

Monocentric, retrospective and descriptive study. We enrolled children and adolescents aged less than 18 years. All data were collected from patients’ files.

8 patients were included (5 girls), two of them were first-degree related. They all had a typical clinical presentation of PIPO (excessive abdominal distension, abdominal pain and vomiting) but with a later onset than usually seen in primary PIPO (median (range) age: 6.3 years [2-15.6]). The median age (range) at diagnosis was 7.8 years [4-15.7]. In most patients contrast studies showed massively distended small bowel and colon. Antroduodenal manometry was performed in 6 patients and was abnormal with a neuropathic pattern. Others were diagnosed using the ESPGHAN criteria (2018 Jun;66(6):991-1019). All patients needed parenteral nutrition at a median (range) age of 11.8 years [6.5-15.9] due to failure to thrive, intestinal failure and electrolytic disorders. Seven patients needed an ileostomy. One out of 8 patients was off PN at 18 years. Three patients had sinus dysfunction: one at the time of PIPO diagnosis and two sometimes after. All of them required a pacemaker. One patient died in her twenties and it wasn’t related to PIPO or its possible complications.

Recessive SGOL1 mutation, a new cohesinopathy affecting the gut and heart rhythm, represents a late-onset but severe form of PIPO. It is usually associated with sinus dysfunction and cardiac dysrhythmia. However, digestive symptoms appear first. Long term outcome is still to describe.

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## Linked entities

- **Genes:** SGO1 (shugoshin 1) [NCBI Gene 151648]
- **Diseases:** CAID syndrome (MONDO:0014528)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10871957