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Collaborative prospective study of the fragile X syndrome: one-year progress report

Authors :
Ae Chudley
Sl Sherman
Dd Weaver
P Ladaique
Mc Pellissier
Hugh P. Robinson
T. Schaap
Peter Steinbach
Karen Brøndum-Nielsen
Mj Mckinley
E. C. Jenkins
Tessa Webb
Teresa Mattina
Jane Halliday
Nj Carpenter
Patrick Ferreira
Wt Brown
S Purvissmith
Op Ferraz
Ia Uchida
Murphy Pd
T Mazurczak
[No Value] Kennerknecht
Kh Gustavson
Gotthold Barbi
Lr Shapiro
Athel Hockey
Ma Voelckel
Gillian M. Turner
Marketta Kähkönen
Jaakko Leisti
Ba Vanoost
U Scapagnini
A. P. T. Smits
Pn Howardpeebles
Anne Maddalena
Jf Mattei
Source :
American journal of medical genetics. 43(1-2)
Publication Year :
1992

Abstract

A prospective study of the fragile X syndrome [fra(X)] was initiated one year ago to refine the estimates of recurrence risks based on the phenotype of the mother and the family history of the syndrome. The basic unit of data consists of the description of the conceptus of women known to carry the fra(X) gene or of mothers of an isolated case. To date, information on 261 women and their conceptuses was ascertained primarily through prenatal diagnosis; these data are summarized here. Although tests of significance were limited due to small sample sizes in subgroups, the following trends were observed: 1) the penetrance of fra(X) site expression was 80% in both male and female conceptuses suggesting that fra(X) site expression is equally penetrant early in development; 2) the sex ratio at the time of prenatal diagnosis did not differ from one, indicating that selection against fra(X) fetuses, if any, does not differ among sexes; 3) the recurrence risk among offspring of borderline/mildly retarded mothers was higher than that among offspring of intellectually normal mothers; 4) the recurrence risk in offspring did not differ based on the mother's fra(X) site expression; and 5) the recurrence risk in offspring of mothers with isolated cases was slightly less (34%) than that of obligate carrier mothers (41%) although this was not significant. The potential use of these prospective data on the fra(X) syndrome is emphasized.

Details

ISSN :
01487299
Volume :
43
Issue :
1-2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of medical genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8e63e95232f06d0ae10f2d75693357f9