| Literature DB >> 23365120 |
Nicole Reisch1, Jan Idkowiak, Beverly A Hughes, Hannah E Ivison, Omar A Abdul-Rahman, Laura G Hendon, Ann Haskins Olney, Shelly Nielsen, Rachel Harrison, Edward M Blair, Vivek Dhir, Nils Krone, Cedric H L Shackleton, Wiebke Arlt.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Mutations in the electron donor enzyme P450 oxidoreductase (POR) result in congenital adrenal hyperplasia with apparent combined 17α-hydroxylase/17,20 lyase and 21-hydroxylase deficiencies, also termed P450 oxidoreductase deficiency (PORD). Major clinical features present in PORD are disordered sex development in affected individuals of both sexes, glucocorticoid deficiency, and multiple skeletal malformations.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23365120 PMCID: PMC3708032 DOI: 10.1210/jc.2012-3449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 0021-972X Impact factor: 5.958
Figure 1.A, An x-ray radiograph performed at postmortem after the termination of pregnancy PORD B at gestational week 25; note the abnormally shaped skull, thin ribs, ankylosis of both elbow joints (radioulnar synostosis), and bilateral bowed femora. B, Magnetic resonance imaging of the head of patient PORD B on postnatal day 2, illustrating the pronounced turricephaly consequent to PORD-associated craniosynostosis.
Prenatal and Postnatal Presentation in 19 Patients Affected by PORD
| Patient Number | Genotype | Karyotype | Malformations Detected by Prenatal Ultrasound | Total Malformation Score at Birth[ | Maternal Androgen Excess | DSD Detected by Prenatal Ultrasound | DSD Evident at Birth | Outcome | Follow-Up Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | IVS7 + 2dupT/p.Q455R | XY | N | N | Y | Death at 19 mo | 19 mo | ||
| 2 | p.A287P/ IVS6-2A>T | XY | Y | Y | Y | Developmental delay, death at age 2 y | 2 y | ||
| 3 | p.A287P/ IVS6-2A>T | XX | Y | N | N | Delayed motor and speech development | 23 mo | ||
| PORD B | p.A287P/p.I444H | XY | n.d. | Y | Y | TOP gestational wk 25 | TOP gestational wk 25[ | ||
| PORD C | p.A287P/p.Q455Rfs166X | XX | N | N | N | Death at d 69 | 69 d | ||
| 4 | p.A287P/p.V472A | XY | N | 10 | N | N | Y | Conductive hearing loss, normal intelligence | 11 y |
| 5 | p.A287P/IVS8 + 1G>A | XX | N | 9 | N | N | Y | Normal[ | 11 y |
| 6 | p.A287P/p.G188V191dup | XY | N | 9 | Y | N | Y | Delayed motor and speech development | 23 mo |
| 7 | p.A287P/− | XX | N | 9 | Y | N | Y | Normal | 9 y |
| PORD A | p.A287P/p.A287P | XY | N | 8 | N | N | N | Normal | 4 y |
| 8 | p.R498P/p.R498P | XX | N | 7 | Y | N | N | Normal | 1.5 y |
| 9 | p.A287P/p.A287P | XX | N | 7 | Y | N | Y | Normal | 6 y |
| 10 | p.A287P/p.H628P | XX | N | 7 | N | N | Y | Conductive hearing loss at age 4 y, slightly delayed development | 9 y |
| 11 | p.A287P/p.A287P | XX | N | 5 | N | N | Y | Normal | 14 y |
| 12 | p.Y376 L | XX | N | 5 | N | N | N | Normal | 20 y |
| 13 | p.R457H/p.A287P | XX | N | 4 | N | N | Y | Normal | 16 y |
| 14 | p.A287P/Del exU1-1 | XX | N | 4 | N | N | N | Normal | 3.5 y |
| 15 | p.C569Y/p.Y181D | XX | N | 4 | N | N | Y | Normal | 4 y |
| 16 | p.A287P/p.A287P | XY | N | 4 | N | N | N | Normal | 7 y |
| 17 | p.C569Y/p.Y181D | XY | N | 0 | Y | N | N | Normal | 2 y |
Abbreviations: E3, estriol; −, no mutation detected; N, no; n.d., not determined; Y, yes. Bold indicates cases with visible malformations on prenatal ultrasound and a total malformation score above 10.
For a detailed description of the PORD malformation score, please see published reference (8).
The malformation score for case PORD B is likely to be underestimated as scoring based on postmortem report rather than clinical examination.
Normal, normal postnatal development in terms of growth, speech, motor, and cognitive function.
Figure 2.Proposed urine steroid metabolite ratios for a prenatal diagnosis of PORD. Illustrated are normative values from gestational week 15 to week 23 (n = 60) and 4 pregnancies with affected PORD babies and 1 pregnancy with a heterozygous carrier. Panel A shows reduced estriol relative to the excretion of the progesterone metabolite PD. Panel B shows increased value of the EpialloPD to estriol ratio resulting from pregnenolone accumulation caused by attenuated 17-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase and decreased estriol production. Panel C shows increased 16-hydroxyandrosterone excretion in relation to decreased estriol, indicative of the effect of mutant POR on CYP19A1 aromatase activity. Panel D shows increased androsterone excretion compared with etiocholanolone, indicative of alternative pathway androgen synthesis activity (2). Panel E gives the abbreviation and systematic name of the urinary steroid metabolites and from which they derive. The ratios denoted by an asterisk were obtained from a previously published report on a patient (17).
Figure 3.Simplified representation of steroid synthesis and metabolism in normal (A) and PORD pregnancies (B). The precise locations of certain transformations, for example 5PD to EpialloPD are unconfirmed. Chol, cholesterol; Preg, pregnenolone; 5PD, pregnenediol (5-pregnene-3β,20α-diol); Prog, progesterone; 16OH-DHEA-sulfate, 16-hydroxydehydroepiandrosterone sulfate; 16OH-Δ4, 16-hydroxyandrostenedione; 5α17HP, EpialloPD 17-hydroxyallopregnanolone (5α-pregnane-3α,17α-diol-20-one); An, androsterone; AD, androstanediol (5α-androstane-3α,17β-diol); DHT, 5α-dihydrotestosterone; 17OH-Preg, 17-hydroxypregnenolone; DHEA, dehydroepiandrosterone; 17OHP, 17-hydroxyprogesterone.