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When to test fetuses for RASopathies? Proposition from a systematic analysis of 352 multicenter cases and a postnatal cohort

Authors :
Laura Papi
Enrico Grosso
Fabio Sirchia
Giuseppe Damante
Chiara Di Marco
Marco Tartaglia
Paola Daniele
Teresa Mattina
Francesca Clementina Radio
Sara Corno
Valentina Pinna
Ilaria Donati
Alexandra Scott
Annabella Marozza
Daniela Mangiameli
Elena Andreucci
Marie Ange Delrue
Tommaso Mazza
Antonella Giancotti
Giada Tortora
Antonio Pizzuti
Maria Romagnoli
Gioia Mastromoro
Paolo Versacci
Valentina D'Ambrosio
Francesca Pantaleoni
Valeria Giorgia Naretto
Niccolò Di Giosaffatte
Andrea Zonta
Alessandro De Luca
Anne-Marie Laberge
Source :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics. 23(6)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose Recent studies have identified suggestive prenatal features of RASopathies (e.g., increased nuchal translucency [NT], cystic hygroma [CH], hydrops, effusions, congenital heart diseases [CHD], polyhydramnios, renal anomalies). Our objective is to clarify indications for RASopathy prenatal testing. We compare genotype distributions between pre- and postnatal populations and propose genotype–phenotype correlations. Methods Three hundred fifty-two chromosomal microarray–negative cases sent for prenatal RASopathy testing between 2012 and 2019 were collected. For most, 11 RASopathy genes were tested. Postnatal cohorts (25 patients with available prenatal information and 108 institutional database genotypes) and the NSeuroNet database were used for genotypic comparisons. Results The overall diagnostic yield was 14% (50/352), with rates >20% for effusions, hydrops, and CHD. Diagnostic yield was significantly improved in presence of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), persistent or associated CH, any suggestive finding combined with renal anomaly or polyhydramnios, or ≥2 ultrasound findings. Largest prenatal contributors of pathogenic variants were PTPN11 (30%), RIT1 (16%), RAF1 (14%), and HRAS (12%), which considerably differ from their prevalence in postnatal populations. HRAS, LZTR1, and RAF1 variants correlated with hydrops/effusions, and RIT1 with prenatal onset HCM. Conclusion After normal chromosomal microarray, RASopathies should be considered when any ultrasound finding of lymphatic dysplasia or suggestive CHD is found alone or in association.

Details

ISSN :
15300366
Volume :
23
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b448c4b071f3eb5cb107ce15e7b6d7b5