Literature DB >> 10218527

Clinical features of the prevalent form of childhood deafness, DFNB1, due to a connexin-26 gene defect: implications for genetic counselling.

F Denoyelle1, S Marlin, D Weil, L Moatti, P Chauvin, E N Garabédian, C Petit.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: DFNB1, the locus of an autosomal recessive form of deafness due to mutations in the connexin-26 gene (CX26 or GJB2) is one of the most frequent hereditary defects in human beings. To date, no clinical characterisation of the DFNB1 inner-ear defects has been reported, which precludes the provision of prognostic information and genetic counselling.
METHODS: We enrolled, in a prospective study, 140 children from 104 families affected by sensorineural deafness with various degrees of hearing loss. The children either belonged to a family affected by autosomal recessive deafness (DFNB family) or represented sporadic cases. We searched for mutations in the 5' non-coding exon and in the coding region of CX26. Audiometric and radiological features were investigated and compared in deaf children with and without CX26 mutations.
FINDINGS: CX26 mutations were present in 43 (49%) of the 88 families with cases of prelingual deafness versus none of the 16 families with postlingual forms of deafness (p<0.01). The inner-ear defects of 54 prelingually deaf children with biallelic CX26 mutations were compared with the defects in 57 prelingually deaf children without CX26 mutations. DFNB1 deafness varied from mild to profound, associated with sloping or flat audiometric curves and a radiologically normal inner ear. Hearing loss was not progressive in 11 of 16 cases tested, and variations in the severity of deafness between siblings were common.
INTERPRETATION: The characteristic audiometric and radiological features of DFNB1 should be the reference used to guide the investigation, by CX26 molecular diagnostic tests, of deaf children with a compatible phenotype. Prognostic information can now be given to families: the hearing loss in DFNB1 deafness is non-progressive in most cases, at least up to young adulthood. An important element for genetic counselling is that the severity of hearing loss due to DFNB1 is extremely variable and cannot be predicted, even within families.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10218527     DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(98)11071-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  90 in total

Review 1.  Science, medicine, and the future: New interventions in hearing impairment.

Authors:  K P Steel
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Authors:  V Iliadou; N Eleftheriades; A S Metaxas; A Skevas; T Kiratzidis; A Pampanos; N Voyiatzis; M Grigoriadou; M B Petersen; T Iliades
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Review 5.  Genetics of hearing loss: where are we standing now?

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6.  [Phenotype of patients showing hearing impairment based on the 35delG mutation in the connexin 26 gene].

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Review 7.  Genetic and pharmacological intervention for treatment/prevention of hearing loss.

Authors:  Douglas A Cotanche
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8.  Correlation between GJB2 mutations and audiological deficits: personal experience.

Authors:  Pasqualina M Picciotti; Roberta Pietrobono; Giovanni Neri; Gaetano Paludetti; Anna Rita Fetoni; Francesca Cianfrone; Maria Grazia Pomponi
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2008-07-31       Impact factor: 2.503

9.  Audiological and genetic features of the mtDNA mutations.

Authors:  X Z Liu; S Angeli; X M Ouyang; W Liu; X M Ke; Y H Liu; S X Liu; L L Du; X W Deng; H Yuan; D Yan
Journal:  Acta Otolaryngol       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 1.494

10.  GJB2 and GJB6 gene mutations found in Indian probands with congenital hearing impairment.

Authors:  G Padma; P V Ramchander; U V Nandur; T Padma
Journal:  J Genet       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 1.166

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