| Literature DB >> 25516202 |
Juan Geng, Jonathan Picker, Zhaojing Zheng, Xiaoqing Zhang, Jian Wang, Fuki Hisama, David W Brown, Mary P Mullen, David Harris, Joan Stoler, Ann Seman, David T Miller, Qihua Fu1, Amy E Roberts, Yiping Shen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Congenital heart defects (CHD), as the most common congenital anomaly, have been reported to be frequently associated with pathogenic copy number variants (CNVs). Currently, patients with CHD are routinely offered chromosomal microarray (CMA) testing, but the diagnostic yield of CMA on CHD patients has not been extensively evaluated based on a large patient cohort. In this study, we retrospectively assessed the detected CNVs in a total of 514 CHD cases (a 422-case clinical cohort from Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) and a 92-case research cohort from Shanghai Children's Medical Center (SCMC)) and conducted a genotype-phenotype analysis. Furthermore, genes encompassed in pathogenic/likely pathogenic CNVs were prioritized by integrating several tools and public data sources for novel CHD candidate gene identification.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25516202 PMCID: PMC4378009 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-1127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Association of CNV with isolated CHD and syndromic CHD
| CNV category | Syndromic CHD cases
| Isolated CHD cases (n = 162) | Syndromic CHD vs. Isolated CHD p Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Syndromic CHD cases with co-occurring DD/ID or ASD (n = 75) | Syndromic CHD cases without DD/ID and ASD(n = 173) | p Value | Total cases (n = 248) | |||
| Non-polymorphic CNVs | 38 (50.7%) | 60 (34.7%) |
| 98 (39.5%) | 43 (26.5%) |
|
| Pathogenic CNVs | 17 (22.7%) | 18 (10.4%) |
| 35 (14.1%) | 7 (4.3%) |
|
| Pathogenic + likely pathogenic CNVs | 22 (29.3%) | 29 (16.7%) |
| 51 (20.6%) | 15 (9.3%) |
|
Twelve patients with aneuploidy were not included.
The following abbreviations were used: DD, development delay; ID, intellectual disability; ASD, autism spectrum disorder.
Clinical relevance of CNV to CHD phenotypes
| A | C | D | E | F | G | H | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| No. of cases | n = 13 | n = 19 | n = 26 | n = 8 | n = 44 | n = 31 | - |
| Non-polymorphic CNV | 4 (30.8%) | 1 (5.3%) | 7 (26.9%) | 1(12.5%) | 17 (38.6%) | 7 (22.6%) | - |
| Pathogenic CNV | 0 | 0 | 1 (3.9%) | 0 | 3 (6.8%) | 2 (6.5%) | - |
| Pathogenic + likely pathogenic CNV | 0 | 0 | 4 (15.4%) | 0 | 5 (11.4%) | 3 (9.7%) | - |
|
| |||||||
| No. of cases | n = 84 | n = 41 | n = 74 | n = 27 | n = 75 | n = 47 | n = 23 |
| Non-polymorphic CNV | 34(40.5%) | 6(14.6%) | 25(33.8%) | 12(44.4%) | 31(44.3%) | 14(29.8%) | 4(17.4%) |
| Pathogenic CNV | 11(13.1%) | 2 (4.9%) | 6 (8.1%) | 4 (14.8%) | 10(13.3%) | 3(6.4%) | 1(4.4%) |
| Pathogenic + likely pathogenic CNV | 17(20.2%) | 2 (4.9%) | 13(17.6%) | 4 (14.8%) | 13(17.3%) | 5(10.6%) | 3(13.0%) |
The cases of B category was too low, thus not included. The twelve patients with aneuploidy were not included for calculation.
Figure 1Distribution of the 89 sub-chromosomal genomic imbalances detected in this study among patients with CHD. Chromosomal loci 22q11.21 and 8p23.1 were two known pathogenic CNV hotspots in CHD patients. This study also identified deletions at loci 4q terminal, 15q11.2, 16p12.1 and Yp11.2 as potential pathogenic hotspots.
Figure 2Recurrent deletions in the 4q terminal region. (A) The previously reported cardiovascular critical region (4q32.2-q34.3) are located proximal to the smallest overlapping region (SOR) defined in this study. The two regions do not overlap. The asterisk indicates the de novo variant. (B) Two additional cases with deletion overlap with the SOR. Cases 1 from Strehle, EM, et al. [30] and Case 2 from Maurin et al. [29]. All three 4q terminal deletions involved the SORBS2 gene.
Recurrent CHD-associated CNV loci
| Locus (hg19) | CNV | Size range (kb) | Cardiac Phenotypes | Frequency in our study | Frequency in control | p Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4qter | Deletion | 4559-19269 | DORV, right dominant AV canal, hypoplastic LV, multiple VSDs, BAV, CoA, DILV, hypoplastic aortic arch, TOF, PFO | 5/502 | 0/9170 |
|
| 15q11.2 | Deletion | 245-2703 | D-TGA, VSD, ASD, PS, CoA, PDA, AS, AR, left ventricular dysfunction | 4/502 | 19/9170 |
|
| 16p12.2 | Deletion | 480 | ASD, TAPVC, PDA | 3/502 | 3/9170 |
|
| Yp11.2 | Deletion | 1300-3000 | ASD, CoA, PFO | 3/502 | 12/32850 |
|
control cases from Soemedi et al. [8] and Cooper et al. [21].
control cases from Repnikova et al. [22].
The chromosome coordinates for this deletion map to 16p12.1 in hg18, but map to 16p12.2 in hg19.
Summary of the diagnostic yields of CMA in clinical setting with different microarray platforms in studies of CHD from literatures
| Study | Platform | Patients | Diagnostic yield (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Phenotype | ||||
| 1 | Thienpont B, et al. (2007)
[ | 1 Mb BAC/PAC | 60 | Syndromic CHD | 10(16.6%) |
| 2 | Richards AA, et al. (2008)
[ | Nimblegen 385 K CGH | 20 | Syndromic CHD | 5 (25%) |
| 20 | Isolated CHD | 0 | |||
| 3 | Erdogan F, et al. (2008)
[ | tiling path BAC array | 105 | Isolated CHD | 4(3.8%) |
| 4 | Breckpot J, et al. (2010)
[ | 1 Mb BAC/PAC | 90 | Syndromic CHD | 16(17.8%) |
| 5 | Goldmuntz E, et al. (2011)
[ | Affymetrix GeneChip 100 K array | 58 | Syndromic CHD | 12(20.7%) |
| 6 | Breckpot J, et al. (2011)
[ | Affymetrix 6.0 array | 46 | Isolated CHD | 2 (4.3%) |
| 7 | Connor JA, et al. (2013)
[ | Not specified | 121 | Unselected CHD | 9 (7%) |
| 8 | Syrmou A, et al. (2013)
[ | Agilent 244 K CGH array | 55 | Syndromic CHD | 29 (52.7%) |
| Agilent 4 × 180 K SNP + CGH array | |||||
| 9 | Our study | Same as above | 162 | Isolated CHD | 7 (4.3%) |
| 260 | Syndromic CHD | 47 (18.1%) | |||
Diagnostic yield was defined as the number of patients with abnormal aberrations divided by the total number of cases tested. In patients with syndromic CHD, pathogenic chromosomal imbalances were detected in about 16%-25% of cases. But the diagnostic yield of CMA in isolated CHD cohort was poorly studied.
Many CNVs included were not necessary pathogenic.
Twelve patients with gross chromosomal aberrations were included.