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Comprehensive study of 28 individuals with SIN3A-related disorder underscoring the associated mild cognitive and distinctive facial phenotype

Authors :
Balasubramanian M
Dingemans AJM
lbaba S
Richardson R
Yates TM
Cox H
Douzgou S
Armstrong R
Sansbury FH
Burke KB
Fry AE
Ragge N
Sharif S
Foster A
De Sandre-Giovannoli A
Elouej S
Vasudevan P
Mansour S
Wilson K
Stewart H
Heide S
Nava C
Keren B
Demirdas S
Brooks AS
Vincent M
Isidor B
Küry S
Schouten M
Leenders E
Chung WK
van Haeringen A
Scheffner T
Debray F
White SM
Valenzuela Palafoll MI
Pfundt R
Newbury-Ecob R
Kleefstra T
Balasubramanian M
Dingemans AJM
lbaba S
Richardson R
Yates TM
Cox H
Douzgou S
Armstrong R
Sansbury FH
Burke KB
Fry AE
Ragge N
Sharif S
Foster A
De Sandre-Giovannoli A
Elouej S
Vasudevan P
Mansour S
Wilson K
Stewart H
Heide S
Nava C
Keren B
Demirdas S
Brooks AS
Vincent M
Isidor B
Küry S
Schouten M
Leenders E
Chung WK
van Haeringen A
Scheffner T
Debray F
White SM
Valenzuela Palafoll MI
Pfundt R
Newbury-Ecob R
Kleefstra T
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Witteveen-Kolk syndrome (OMIM 613406) is a recently defined neurodevelopmental syndrome caused by heterozygous loss-of-function variants in SIN3A. We define the clinical and neurodevelopmental phenotypes related to SIN3A-haploinsufficiency in 28 unreported patients. Patients with SIN3A variants adversely affecting protein function have mild intellectual disability, growth and feeding difficulties. Involvement of a multidisciplinary team including a geneticist, pediatrician and neurologist should be considered in managing these patients. Patients described here were identified through a combination of clinical evaluation and gene matching strategies (GeneMatcher and Decipher). All patients consented to participate in this study. Mean age of this cohort was 8.2 years (17 males, 11 females). Out of 16 patients ≥ eight years old assessed, eight (50%) had mild intellectual disability (ID), four had moderate ID (22%), and one had severe ID (6%). Four (25%) did not have any cognitive impairment. Other neurological symptoms such as seizures (4/28) and hypotonia (12/28) were common. Behaviour problems were reported in a minority. In patients ≥2 years, three were diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and four with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). We report 27 novel variants and one previously reported variant. 24 were truncating variants; three were missense variants and one large in-frame gain including exons 10-12.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Dingemans AJM, lbaba S, Richardson R, Yates TM, Cox H, Douzgou S, Armstrong R, Sansbury FH, Burke KB, Fry AE, Ragge N, Sharif S, Foster A, De Sandre-Giovannoli A, Elouej S, Vasudevan P, Mansour S, Wilson K, Stewart H, Heide S, Nava C, Keren B, Demirdas S, Brooks AS, Vincent M, Isidor B, Küry S, Schouten M, Leenders E, Chung WK, van Haeringen A, Scheffner T, Debray F, White SM, Valenzuela Palafoll MI, Pfundt R, Newbury-Ecob R, Kleefstra T
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1366676222
Document Type :
Electronic Resource