| Literature DB >> 24689080 |
Olga Zilina1, Rita Teek2, Pille Tammur3, Kati Kuuse3, Maria Yakoreva4, Eve Vaidla3, Triin Mölter-Väär3, Tiia Reimand5, Ants Kurg6, Katrin Ounap2.
Abstract
Chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) is now established as the first-tier cytogenetic diagnostic test for fast and accurate detection of chromosomal abnormalities in patients with developmental delay/intellectual disability (DD/ID), multiple congenital anomalies (MCA), and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). We present our experience with using CMA for postnatal and prenatal diagnosis in Estonian patients during 2009-2012. Since 2011, CMA is on the official service list of the Estonian Health Insurance Fund and is performed as the first-tier cytogenetic test for patients with DD/ID, MCA or ASD. A total of 1191 patients were analyzed, including postnatal (1072 [90%] patients and 59 [5%] family members) and prenatal referrals (60 [5%] fetuses). Abnormal results were reported in 298 (25%) patients, with a total of 351 findings (1-3 per individual): 147 (42%) deletions, 106 (30%) duplications, 89 (25%) long contiguous stretches of homozygosity (LCSH) events (>5 Mb), and nine (3%) aneuploidies. Of all findings, 143 (41%) were defined as pathogenic or likely pathogenic; for another 143 findings (41%), most of which were LCSH, the clinical significance remained unknown, while 61 (18%) reported findings can now be reclassified as benign or likely benign. Clinically relevant findings were detected in 126 (11%) patients. However, the proportion of variants of unknown clinical significance was quite high (41% of all findings). It seems that our ability to detect chromosomal abnormalities has far outpaced our ability to understand their role in disease. Thus, the interpretation of CMA findings remains a rather difficult task requiring a close collaboration between clinicians and cytogeneticists.Entities:
Keywords: Chromosomal microarray analysis; copy-number variation; developmental delay; first-tier testing; intellectual disability; postnatal diagnosis; prenatal diagnosis
Year: 2014 PMID: 24689080 PMCID: PMC3960059 DOI: 10.1002/mgg3.57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Genomic Med ISSN: 2324-9269 Impact factor: 2.183
Aberrations that overlap with critical genomic regions for microdeletion and microduplication syndromes, or encompass genes implicated in human diseases.
| Cytoband | Syndrome/Disease | OMIM No. | Gene(s) | No. of deletion cases | No. of duplication cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1p36 | 1p36 microdeletion | 607872 | 4 | – | |
| 1q21.1 | 1q21.1 deletion/duplication | 612474/612475 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 2 | 2 |
| 1q43-q44 | Megalencephaly-polymicrogyria-polydactyly-hydrocephalus syndrome | 603387 | 1 | – | |
| 2p16.3 | 2p16.3 deletion | 614332 | 1 | – | |
| 2qq11.2 | 2q11.2 microdeletion | – | 1 | – | |
| 2q31.2 | 2q31.2 deletion | 612345 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | – |
| 2q37 | 2q37 microdeletion | 600430 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | – |
| 3p25-pter | Distal 3p deletion | 613792 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | – |
| 3p25.3 | Von Hippel–Lindau syndrome | 193300 | 1 | – | |
| 3p13-p14 | Waardenburg syndrome | 193510 | 1 | – | |
| 3q22.3 | Blepharophimosis-ptosis-epicanthus inversus syndrome | 110100 | 1 | 1 | |
| 4p16.3 | Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome | 194190 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | 2 |
| 4q22.1 | Parkinson disease | 168601 | – | 2 | |
| 5p15.2 | Cri-du-Chat syndrome | 123450 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 2 | – |
| 5p15.2 | Mental retardation in Cri-du-Chat syndrome | 123450 | 1 | – | |
| 5q35.2-q35.3 | Sotos syndrome/5q35 microduplication | 117550/– | 2 | 1 | |
| 6q25.1-q25.2 | Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophy 4, autosomal dominant | 612998 | SYNE1 | 1 | – |
| 7p21.1 | Saethre–Chotzen syndrome | 101400 | 1 | – | |
| 7p14.1 | Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome/Pallister–Hall syndrome | 175700/146510 | GLI3 | 1 | – |
| 7q11.23 | Williams–Beuren syndrome | 609757 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 1 | – |
| 7q21.2-q21.3 | Split-hand/foot malformation 1 with sensorineural hearing loss | 220600 | 1 | – | |
| 7q36.3 | Polydactyly, preaxial II | 174500 | 1 | – | |
| 8q24.13 | Spastic paraplegia 8, autosomal dominant | 603563 | 1 | – | |
| 10q23 | Juvenile polyposis syndrome + 10q23 deletion | 174900/612242 | 1 | – | |
| 10q26 | 10q26 deletion | 609625 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | 1 |
| 11p15.5 | Beckwith–Wiedemann/Silver–Russell syndrome | 130650/180860 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 3 | 1 |
| 11q23 | Jacobsen syndrome/Thrombocytopenia, Paris-Trousseau type | 147791/188025 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | – |
| 12p12.1 | DD, language delay, behavioral problems | – | 1 | – | |
| 15q11.2 | Prader–Willi/Angelman syndrome (Type 1) | 176270/105830 | 1 | 1 | |
| 15q11.2 | Prader–Willi syndrome/Angelman syndrome (Type 2) | 176270/105830 | 1 | – | |
| 15q11.2 | 15q11.2 microdeletion/microduplication | 6 | 1 | ||
| 15q13.3 | 15q13.3 microdeletion/microduplication | 612001 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 7 | 2 |
| 16p11.2 | 16p11.2 microdeletion/microduplication | 611913/614671 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 4 | 1 |
| 16p12.1 | 16p12.1 microdeletion | 136570 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 2 | – |
| 16p13.11 | 16p13.11 microdeletion/microduplication | – | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 1 | 5 |
| 16p13.2 | Epilepsy with neurodevelopmental defects | 613971 | 1 | – | |
| 17p13.3 | 17p13.3 distal deletion | – | 2 | – | |
| 17p12 | Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies | 162500 | 2 | – | |
| 17p11.2 | Smith–Magenis syndrome | 182290 | 1 | – | |
| 17q11.2 | Neurofibromatosis I | 162200 | 2 | – | |
| 17q21.31 | Koolen-De Vries syndrome | 610443 | Contiguous gene deletion/duplication syndrome, incl. | 1 | – |
| 18p | Chromosome 18p deletion syndrome | 146390 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome | 1 | – |
| 18p11.31 | Holoprosencephaly 4 | 142946 | 2 | – | |
| 18q22.3-q23 | Congenital aural atresia | 607842 | 1 | – | |
| 22q11.2 | DiGeorge/Velocardiofacial/Chromosome 22q11.2 duplication syndrome | 188400/192430/608363 | Contiguous gene deletion syndrome, incl. | 3 | 1 |
| 22q13 | Phelan–McDermid syndrome | 606232 | Contiguous gene deletion/duplication syndrome, incl. | 3 | – |
| Xp22.31 | Ichthyosis | 308100 | 1 | – | |
| Xp21.3-p21.2 | X-linked mental retardation | 300143 | 3 | – | |
| Xp21.1 | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 310200 | 3 | – | |
| Xq28 | Rett syndrome | 312750 | – | 1 | |
| Yq11.21-q11.23 | Spermatogenic failure | 415000 | 1 | – |
Susceptibility locus.
One of the patients with a deletion of exons 3-8 of NSD1 did not display a clinical phenotype of Sotos syndrome, but rather a phenotype of 5q35 microduplication.
Duplication represents a susceptibility locus.
In one case, maternal UPD was diagnosed.
Prenatal CMA testing in Estonia during 2009–2012 (including fetuses analyzed after the termination of pregnancy).
| Indication for prenatal diagnosis | Number of cases (%) |
|---|---|
| Familial balanced rearrangement | 18 (30) |
| Anomaly on ultrasonography | 13 (22) |
| Termination of pregnancy due to abnormal fetus | 8 (13) |
| Positive triple test | 5 (8) |
| Isolated abnormal nuchal translucency | 5 (8) |
| Other child(ren) with chromosomal disease | 4 (7) |
| Other child or parent with unspecified genetic pathology | 3 (5) |
| Unspecified | 3 (5) |
| Recurrent spontaneous abortions | 1 (2) |
| Total | 60 (100) |
CMA findings in prenatal tests (including cases tested after the termination of pregnancy).
| Case | Indication | Karyotype | CMA | Clinical significance | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Isolated increased nuchal translucency | – | arr[hg19] Xp21.1(31,665,779–32,096,779) × 3 | UCS | Termination of pregnancy |
| 2 | Recurrent spontaneous abortions | – | arr[hg19] 8q11.1q11.23(47,060,977–52,693,165) × 2 hmz | UCS | Tested after the termination of pregnancy |
| 3 | Positive triple test | 46,XX | Multiple long stretches of homozygosity | Pathogenic | Termination of pregnancy |
| 4 | Positive triple test | 46,XX[64]/47,XX,+7[9] | arr(7) × 2–3 (10–20%) | Likely benign | Normal female at term |
| 5 | Abnormal ultrasound | – | arr[hg19] 7p14.1p13(42,179,377–44,932,538) × 1 | Pathogenic (Greig syndrome, OMIM 175700) | Tested after the termination of pregnancy |
| 6 | Familial balanced rearrangement | 46,XX,rec(4)dup(4p)del(4q)inv(4)(p15.3q35)pat | arr[hg19] 4p13.33p16.3(1–13,912,694)x3, 4q35.2(188,730,709–190,880,409) × 1 | Pathogenic | Termination of pregnancy |
| 7 | Familial balanced rearrangement | 46,XY,inv(10)(p11.2;q21.2)mat | arr[hg19] 12q14.2q15(63,291,364–68,794,078) × 2 hmz | UCS | Not known |
| 8 | Dysmorphic fetus | – | Multiple long stretches of homozygosity | Pathogenic | Tested after the termination of pregnancy |
CMA, chromosomal microarray analysis; UCS, unknown clinical significance.