| Literature DB >> 27379245 |
Benjamin M Helm1, Samantha L Freeze2.
Abstract
Congenital heart defects (CHDs) are common birth defects and result in significant morbidity and global economic impact. Genetic factors play a role in most CHDs; however, identification of these factors has been historically slow due to technological limitations and incomplete understanding of the impact of human genomic variation on normal and abnormal cardiovascular development. The advent of chromosome microarray (CMA) brought tremendous gains in identifying chromosome abnormalities in a variety of human disorders and is now considered part of a standard evaluation for individuals with multiple congenital anomalies and/or neurodevelopmental disorders. Several studies investigating use of CMA found that this technology can identify pathogenic copy-number variations (CNVs) in up to 15-20% of patients with CHDs with other congenital anomalies. However, there have been fewer studies exploring the use of CMA for patients with isolated CHDs. Recent studies have shown that the diagnostic yield of CMA in individuals with seemingly isolated CHD is lower than in individuals with CHDs and additional anomalies. Nevertheless, positive CMA testing in this group supports chromosome variation as one mechanism underlying the development of isolated, non-syndromic CHD - either as a causative or risk-influencing genetic factor. CMA has also identified novel genomic variation in CHDs, shedding light on candidate genes and pathways involved in cardiac development and malformations. Additional studies are needed to further address this issue. Early genetic diagnosis can enhance the medical management of patients and potentially provide crucial information about recurrence. This information is critical for genetic counseling of patients and family members. In this review, we review CMA for the non-genetics cardiology provider, offer a summary of CNV in isolated CHDs, and advocate for the use of CMA as part of the cardiovascular genetics evaluation of patients with isolated CHDs. We also provide perspective regarding the benefits and challenges that lie ahead for this model in the clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: chromosome microarray; clinical genetics; congenital heart defects; copy-number variation; genetic counseling
Year: 2016 PMID: 27379245 PMCID: PMC4905945 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2016.00019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
A summary of CNVs identified by CMA in non-syndromic CHDs reported in the literature.
| Study | CNVs (limited list) | Confirmed or putative candidate genes for CHDs noted by authors (limited list) | CHD types in study | Other notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thienpont et al. ( | 4q34 deletion | AS, TOF, CoA, VSD, truncus arteriosus, PS | ||
| 5q35.1 deletion | ||||
| 9q34.3 deletion | ||||
| 22q11.2 duplication | ||||
| Erdogan et al. ( | 1q21.1 deletion | Any CHD: majority were VSD; TOF, PS, CoA, ASD, AS, HLHS, and AVSD | The 17p11.2 deletion is causative for Smith–Magenis syndrome. Features of this disorder were not appreciated until after the test result | |
| 2p22.3 duplication | ||||
| 17p11.2 deletion | ||||
| 22q11.2 duplication | ||||
| Greenway et al. ( | 1q21.2 deletion and duplication | TOF | Study involved only subjects with TOF | |
| 2p23.3 duplication | ||||
| 3p25.1 duplication | ||||
| 9q34.3 deletion | ||||
| 20p12.2 deletion | ||||
| 22q11.2 deletion | ||||
| Silversides et al. ( | 1q21.1 duplication | TOF | Study involved only subjects with TOF | |
| 1q32.2 deletion | ||||
| 3p25.1 deletion | ||||
| 7q21.11 deletion | ||||
| 7p15.3 deletion | ||||
| 7p22.2 deletion | ||||
| 8p23.1 deletion | ||||
| 8p23.3 duplication | ||||
| Soemedi et al. ( | 1q21.1 duplication | TOF, ASD, VSD, CoA, complex left-sided defect, TAPVR | Other rare CNVs identified with unconfirmed candidate genes associated with cardiac development; TOF overly represented | |
| 4q34 deletion | ||||
| 5q14.1q14.3 duplication | ||||
| 5q35.3 duplication | ||||
| 8p23.1 | ||||
| Fakhro et al. ( | 1q32.3 duplication | Heterotaxy with: D-TGA; dextrocardia; VSD, ASD, PAPVR; malposed great arteries, CoA | Study involved CHDs with heterotaxy | |
| 2p25.1 duplication | ||||
| 3p24.1-p23 deletion | ||||
| 3p24.1 duplication | ||||
| 7q36.1 deletion | ||||
| 8p23.1 deletion | ||||
| 9q34.11 duplication | ||||
| Zhao et al. ( | 3q21.3 duplication | ASD, VSD, PDA, TOF, Ebstein anomaly, tricuspid incompetence | Study involved 100 Han Chinese subjects | |
| 16q23.1 duplication | ||||
| 18q23 duplication | ||||
| 22q11.2 deletion |
AS, aortic stenosis; ASD, atrial septal defect; AVSD, atrioventricular septal defect; CHD, congenital heart defect; CoA, coarctation of the aorta; D-TGA, dextro-transposition of the great arteries; HLHS, hypoplastic left heart syndrome; PAPVR, partial anomalous pulmonary venous return; PDA, patent ductus arteriosus; PS, pulmonary stenosis; TAPVR, total anomalous pulmonary venous return; TOF, tetralogy of Fallot; VSD, ventricular septal defect.
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