| Literature DB >> 19429598 |
D Furniss1, S-H Kan, I B Taylor, D Johnson, P S Critchley, H P Giele, A O M Wilkie.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Congenital limb malformations (CLMs) are common and present to a variety of specialties, notably plastic and orthopaedic surgeons, and clinical geneticists. The authors aimed to characterise causative mutations in an unselected cohort of patients with CLMs requiring reconstructive surgery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19429598 PMCID: PMC2764122 DOI: 10.1136/jmg.2009.066027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Genet ISSN: 0022-2593 Impact factor: 6.318
Clinical characteristics of the cohort
| Phenotypic characteristic | Number* | % Mutation positive | % Genetic component† |
| Total | 202 | 11 | 32 |
| Number of limbs affected | |||
| 4 | 20 | 30 | 55 |
| 3 | 6 | 33 | 50 |
| 2 | 72 | 17 | 44 |
| 1 | 104 | 2 | 17 |
| Bilateral malformation | 97 | 22 | 47 |
| Positive family history | 51 | 24 | 100 |
| Syndrome or association | 13 | 38 | 54 |
| Other non-limb malformations not classified into a syndrome | 14 | 36 | 43 |
| Polydactyly | |||
| Postaxial | 75 | 5 | 39 |
| Preaxial | 34 | 26 | 38 |
| Pre- and postaxial | 4 | 50 | 50 |
| Triphalangeal thumb | 5 | 80 | 80 |
| Syndactyly | 31 | 16 | 32 |
| Polysyndactyly | 12 | 33 | 42 |
| Longitudinal dysplasia | |||
| Radial | 8 | 25 | 63 |
| Ulnar | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Central | 7 | 0 | 14 |
| Symbrachydactyly | 13 | 0 | 0 |
| Brachydactyly | 1 | 0 | 100 |
| Clinodactyly | 8 | 13 | 25 |
| Camptodactyly | 4 | 25 | 25 |
| Hypoplastic digits | |||
| Thumb | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Other digits | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Trigger thumb | 5 | 0 | 0 |
| Constriction ring syndrome | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Other | 10 | 30 | 30 |
*Totals do not add up to 202 as 24 children had multiple limb malformations which were included in between two and five categories.
†Genetic component consists of individuals with either a cytogenetic or molecularly proven diagnosis, a positive family history of congenital limb malformation (CLM), or a known genetically determined syndrome (see section: Estimation of the overall genetic contribution to CLM).
Clinical characteristics of patients with a confirmed molecular genetic diagnosis
| Gene | Patient number | Mutation (heterozygous unless stated otherwise) | Clinical features* | Bilateral | Family history | Number of limbs affected | Final diagnosis | Reference | ||
| Hands | Feet | Other | ||||||||
| OX1746 | 366C>G, Y122X | Synd 3rd web L | PrP, Synd 1st 2nd 3rd webs | Macrocephaly | Yes | Yes | 3 | GCPS | – | |
| OX2879 | 1320dupT, E441X | PrP, PoP type B | PrP, Synd 1st 2nd webs | Macrocephaly, undescended testicle | Yes | No | 4 | GCPS | 22 | |
| OX2877† | 2372delC, P791RfsX3 | PoP type B | – | – | Yes | Yes | 2 | PoP type A1 | 22 | |
| OX3536 | 2374C>T, R792X | PoP type B | PrP | Hypertelorism | Yes | Yes | 4 | GCPS | 22 | |
| OX3448 | Deletion exons 10–14 | PoP, Synd 2nd 3rd webs R hand, Synd 3rd 4th webs L hand | PrP, Synd 1st 2nd webs | – | Yes | Yes | 4 | GCPS | – | |
| OX2137 | 165_185dup, A55_A61dup | Synd 3rd web | PoP, Synd 4th web | – | Yes | Yes | 4 | SPD1 | 18 | |
| OX1928 | 752-2delA | Synd 3rd web R hand, clinodactyly little fingers | Extra bony element in 1st web space | – | Yes | Yes | 3 | SPD1 with foot anomaly | 23 | |
| OX1749 | 940A>C, I314L | Lateral duplication of ring finger phalanges, Synd 3rd webs | – | – | Yes | Yes | 2 | SPD1/brachydactyly E overlap | 18 | |
| OX1752 | 940A>C, I314L | Little finger hypoplasia, lateral duplication of ring finger phalanges | – | – | Yes | Yes | 2 | SPD1/brachydactyly E overlap | 18 | |
| OX3015† | 955C>T, R319X | Clinodactyly little fingers | PoP | – | Yes | Yes | 3 | CLM with | – | |
| OX3335§ | 995delC, P332HfsX10 | PrP, R side Wassel type 6, L side type 3 | – | Imperforate anus, rectal atresia, hypospadias, overfolded helices | Yes | No | 2 | Townes-Brocks syndrome | 22, 30 | |
| OX2948† | 3414_3415delAT, C1139WfsX14 | PrP R, TpT R | – | – | No | No | 1 | CLM with | 22 | |
| OX3701 | 2593C>T, R865X | Hypoplastic thumbs, L side Blauth type 3a, R side type 3b | – | Anal stenosis, ventriculo-septal defect, vascular malformation | Yes | Yes | 2 | Okihiro syndrome | – | |
| OX2084† | 266T>A, V89E | Grade 1 radial dysplasia with hypoplastic thumbs, Blauth type 4 R hand and type 5 L hand | – | – | Yes | No | 2 | Holt-Oram syndrome | – | |
| OX1925 | 295T>C | TpT | – | – | Yes | No | 2 | TpT with | 21 | |
| OX3159 | 295T>C | TpT, PrP | – | – | Yes | Yes | 2 | PrP type II | 21 | |
| OX3601 | 295T>C | TpT | – | – | Yes | Yes | 2 | TpT with | 21 | |
| OX3424 | Triplication | Complex polysyndactyly, fixed flexion at wrists | Complex polysyndactyly, severe talipes, mirror L foot | Closed spina bifida | Yes | No | 4 | Synd type IV (Haas) | – | |
| – | OX2612§ | t(2;18)(q14.2;p11.2) | Oligodactyly, more severe radially | Dislocated patellae, tibial shortening, fibular bowing, single digit | – | Yes | No | 4 | Split-hand/foot malformation with long bone deficiency 1 | 26 |
| – | OX3689†‡ | dup(6)(p22.2p23) | PrP | – | Low birthweight, microcephaly, developmental delay | Yes | No | 2 | CLM with chromosome abnormality | – |
| – | OX3084§ | del(22)(q11.2q11.2) | PrP | – | Cardiac malformation | No | No | 1 | 22q11.2 deletion syndrome | – |
| – | OX3126§ | del(9)(p22.1) | Camptodactyly, thumb hypoplasia | – | – | Yes | No | 2 | 9p deletion syndrome | – |
| OX3470§ | Homozygous, 955+2_+5delTAAG | Radial dysplasia | Talipes equinovarus | Micrognathia, long columella, hypoplastic alae, nasal haemangioma, macrocephaly. | Yes | No | 2 | Roberts syndrome | 31 | |
CLM, congenital limb malformation; GCPS, Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome; L, left sided; PoP, postaxial polydactyly; PrP, preaxial polydactyly; R, right sided; Synd, syndactyly; SPD1, synpolydactyly 1; TpT, triphalangeal thumb.
*Limbs were bilaterally affected unless otherwise stated.
†Genetic abnormality that would not have been discovered by a clinically focused approach to mutation screening (see Discussion).
‡Cytogenetic diagnosis made as part of the study protocol.
§Clinical diagnosis made after consultation with clinical genetics service. Molecular genetic or cytogenetic diagnosis was made outside of this study.
Proposed criteria for referral of congenital limb malformation (CLM) to a clinical geneticist
| Number of cohort matching criterion | Cytogenetic or molecular diagnosis | |
| 1. Family history of CLM* | 51 (25%) | 12 (24%) |
| 2. CLM associated with non-limb malformation | 27 (13%) | 10 (37%) |
| 3. Severe CLM affecting more than one limb | 47 (23%) | 18 (38%) |
| 4. Bilateral preaxial polydactyly of feet ( | 4 (2%) | 4 (100%) |
| 5. Ring finger duplication of hand ( | 2 (1%) | 2 (100%) |
| 6. Bilateral triphalangeal thumb ( | 3 (1.5%) | 3 (100%) |
*Severe CLM excluded patients with post axial polydactyly, simple (non-bony) syndactyly, isolated clinodactyly, amniotic band sequence, and congenital trigger thumb.