| Literature DB >> 25016475 |
Annette Uwineza, Jean-Hubert Caberg, Janvier Hitayezu, Anne Cecile Hellin, Mauricette Jamar, Vinciane Dideberg, Emmanuel K Rusingiza, Vincent Bours, Leon Mutesa1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Array-CGH is considered as the first-tier investigation used to identify copy number variations. Right now, there is no available data about the genetic etiology of patients with development delay/intellectual disability and congenital malformation in East Africa.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25016475 PMCID: PMC4123504 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-15-79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Array-CGH results and clinical features of the 13 Rwandan patients with pathogenic CNVs
| 1 | 6 y | F | arr [hg19] 18p11.32p11.21 (108,760-14,241,744)x3; 18p11.21q11.2(15,345,079-18,270,513)x3 | 14 Mb | DD, moderate ID, facial dysmorphism, hypertelorism, AVSD with ASD, single transverse palmar crease. | |
| 6 | 11 y | M | arr [hg19] 7q11.23 (72,700,414-74,142,327)x1 | 1442 kb | Moderate ID, facial dysmorphism, friendly behaviour, Mitral valve prolapse. | |
| 13 | 6 y | M | arr [hg19] 6q16.1q21 (93,818,221-108,052,559)x1 | 14 Mb | Unknown | Absence of speech with severe ID, facial dysmorphism, ear abnormalities, microcephaly, bilateral cryptorchidism and autistic-like behavior and underweighted. |
| 14 | 15 y | M | arr [hg19] 22q11.21 (18,706,001-21,464,119)x1 | 2758 kb | Mild ID, hypotonia at birth, facial dysmorphism, hypernasal speech, a short stature. | |
| 16 | 6 y | M | arr [hg19] 1p35.3p31.3 (29,531,861-63,886,221)x3 | 34 Mb | Moderate ID, anxiety and hearing impairment. Facial dysmorphism, clinodactyly. | |
| 17 | 9 y | M | arr [hg19] 8p23.1 (7,145,710-12,450,758)x1 | 5305 kb | Unknown | ASD, VSD with PS. Discrete facial dysmorphism, a shield shaped chest with supranumerary nipples. Hyperactivity, impulsiveness with moderate ID. |
| 18 | 4 y | F | arr [hg19] 7q34q36.2 (141,383,311-154,467,488)x1 | 13 Mb | DD, speech impairment and Facial dysmorphism. | |
| 20 | 6 y | M | arr [hg19] 2q33.1q33.3 (198,383,221-206,943,477)x1 | 8560 kb | Severe ID, facial dysmorphism with absence of speech and autistic spectrum behavior. | |
| 34 | 25 months | F | arr [hg19] 7q11.23 (72,726,572-74,133,332)x3 | 1406 kb | Maternally inherited | Cor pulmonare associated with a DD and speech delay,facial dysmorphism, genu valgum. |
| 36 | 14 y | F | arr [hg19] 8q24.3 (143,631,709-146,274,835)x3,16p13.3(96,766-1,850,720)x1 | 2643 kb and 1754 kb | Unknown | Severe ID, facial dysmorphism clubfoot, short stature and behavior problems characterized by self-mutilation. |
| 37 | 6 y | M | arr [hg19] 22q11.21 (18,706,001-21,464,119)x1 | 2758 kb | Speech delay, severe ID, VSD, DD, Facial dysmorphism, ear abnormalities. | |
| 39 | 4 y | F | arr [hg19] 10p15.3p14 (136,361-11,073,839)x1 | 10 Mb | DD, neonatal hypotonia, and absence of speech development. Facial dysmorphism and clinodactyly. | |
| 45 | 2 y | M | arr [hg19] 17q21.31q21.32(44,156,499-45,152,416)x1 | 995 kb | DD, epilepsy, facial dysmorphism consisting of hypertelorism, low set ears, hypotonia and sparse hair. |
Clinical characteristics of the 50 Rwandans patients with ID/DD and MC
| Gender | |
| Male | 33 (66%) |
| Female | 17 (34%) |
| Age groups | |
| < 5years | 24 (48%) |
| 5-15 years | 19 (38%) |
| > 15 years | 7 (14%) |
| Intellectual disability | |
| Present | 34 (68%) |
| Mild | 4 (8%) |
| Moderate | 13 (26%) |
| Severe | 16 (32%) |
| Profound | 1 (2%) |
| Not evaluated | 16 (32%) |
| Development delay | |
| Absent | 6 (12%) |
| Present | 44 (88%) |
| Facial dysmorphism | |
| Absent | 9 (18%) |
| Present | 41 (82%) |
| Congenital heart defect | |
| Absent | 35 (70%) |
| Present | 15 (30%) |
| Hand and limb abnormalities | |
| Absent | 36 (72%) |
| Present | 14 (28%) |
| Uro-genital malformation | |
| Absent | 46 (92%) |
| Present | 4 (8%) |
| Epilepsy | |
| Absent | 43 (86%) |
| Present | 7 (14%) |
| Microcephaly | |
| Absent | 41 (82%) |
| Present | 9 (18 %) |
Figure 1Pictures of the 13 patients with pathogenic CNVs. A. Patient 1 (trisomy 18p); B Patient 6 (william- Beuren syndrome); C Patient 13 (del 6q16.1q21); D Patient 14 (del 22q11.2); E patient 16 (dup 1p35.3 p31.3); F patient 17 (del 8p23.1); G patient 18 (del 7q34q36.2); H patient 20 (del 2q33.1q33.3); I patient 34 (dup 7q11.23); J patient 36 (dup 8q24.3/del 16p13.3); K patient 37 (del 22q11.21); L patient 39 (del 10p15.3p14); M patient 45 (del 17q21.3q21).
Figure 2Results of array-CGH analysis. A large duplication 1p35.3p31.3 found in patient 16; B chromosome 2q33.1q33.3 deletion found in patient 20. C deletion 6q16.1q21 (patient 13). D deletion 7q34q36.2 found in patient 18. E result of patient 17 with a deletion 8p23.1. F duplication 8q24.3 associated with a deletion 16p13.3 found in patient 36. G large deletion 10p15.3p14 found in patient 39.