Back to Search Start Over

1p36 deletion syndrome: Review and mapping with further characterization of the phenotype, a new cohort of 86 patients

Authors :
Clémence Jacquin
Emilie Landais
Céline Poirsier
Alexandra Afenjar
Ahmad Akhavi
Nathalie Bednarek
Caroline Bénech
Adeline Bonnard
Damien Bosquet
Lydie Burglen
Patrick Callier
Sandra Chantot‐Bastaraud
Christine Coubes
Charles Coutton
Bruno Delobel
Margaux Descharmes
Jean‐Michel Dupont
Vincent Gatinois
Nicolas Gruchy
Sarah Guterman
Abdelkader Heddar
Lucas Herissant
Delphine Heron
Bertrand Isidor
Pauline Jaeger
Guillaume Jouret
Boris Keren
Paul Kuentz
Cedric Le Caignec
Jonathan Levy
Nathalie Lopez
Zoe Manssens
Dominique Martin‐Coignard
Isabelle Marey
Cyril Mignot
Chantal Missirian
Céline Pebrel‐Richard
Lucile Pinson
Jacques Puechberty
Sylvia Redon
Damien Sanlaville
Marta Spodenkiewicz
Anne‐Claude Tabet
Alain Verloes
Gaelle Vieville
Catherine Yardin
François Vialard
Martine Doco‐Fenzy
Source :
American journal of medical genetics. Part AREFERENCES.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Chromosome 1p36 deletion syndrome (1p36DS) is one of the most common terminal deletion syndromes (incidence between 1/5000 and 1/10,000 live births in the American population), due to a heterozygous deletion of part of the short arm of chromosome 1. The 1p36DS is characterized by typical craniofacial features, developmental delay/intellectual disability, hypotonia, epilepsy, cardiomyopathy/congenital heart defect, brain abnormalities, hearing loss, eyes/vision problem, and short stature. The aim of our study was to (1) evaluate the incidence of the 1p36DS in the French population compared to 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and trisomy 21; (2) review the postnatal phenotype related to microarray data, compared to previously publish prenatal data. Thanks to a collaboration with the ACLF (Association des Cytogénéticiens de Langue Française), we have collected data of 86 patients constituting, to the best of our knowledge, the second-largest cohort of 1p36DS patients in the literature. We estimated an average of at least 10 cases per year in France. 1p36DS seems to be much less frequent than 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and trisomy 21. Patients presented mainly dysmorphism, microcephaly, developmental delay/intellectual disability, hypotonia, epilepsy, brain malformations, behavioral disorders, cardiomyopathy, or cardiovascular malformations and, pre and/or postnatal growth retardation. Cardiac abnormalities, brain malformations, and epilepsy were more frequent in distal deletions, whereas microcephaly was more common in proximal deletions. Mapping and genotype-phenotype correlation allowed us to identify four critical regions responsible for intellectual disability. This study highlights some phenotypic variability, according to the deletion position, and helps to refine the phenotype of 1p36DS, allowing improved management and follow-up of patients.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics
Genetics (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
15524833
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of medical genetics. Part AREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9d3a51772819dc5fee7d4ce45602927