| Literature DB >> 28039508 |
M C van Rij1, M L Grijsen2, N M Appelman-Dijkstra3, K B M Hansson4, C A L Ruivenkamp4, K Mulder2, R van Doorn2, A P Oranje5, S G Kant4.
Abstract
We present a patient with poikiloderma, severe osteoporosis and a mild intellectual disability. At the age of 9 years, this patient was proposed to suffer from a novel disease entity designated as calcinosis cutis, osteoma cutis, poikiloderma and skeletal abnormalities (COPS) syndrome. At the age of 35, he was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma. Recently, biallelic pathogenic variants in the RECQL4 gene were detected (c.1048_1049delAG and c.1391-1G>A), confirming a diagnosis of Rothmund-Thomson syndrome (RTS). In the brother of this patient, who had a milder phenotype, a similar diagnosis was made.Entities:
Keywords: Aneuploidy; COPS syndrome; Calcinosis cutis; Chromosomal instability; Mental retardation/developmental delay/intellectual disability; Osteoma cutis; Osteoporosis; Poikiloderma; RECQL4 gene; Rothmund-Thomson syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28039508 PMCID: PMC5243887 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-016-2834-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Fig. 1Facial features at age 34. Note: absent eye brows and eye lashes, small nose
Fig. 2Hands at age 34. Note: relatively small hands, with small though normally shaped nails, normal thumbs
Clinical features in our patient and his brother compared with the frequencies of these features among previously reported Rothmund-Thomson patients
| Our patient | Brother of the patient | Reported frequency of RTS featuresa | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin | |||
| Poikiloderma | + | + | All |
| Hyperpigmentation | + | + | + |
| Hypopigmentation | + | + | + |
| Calcinosis cutis | + | − | Uncommon |
| Osteoma cutis | + | − | − |
| Palmoplantar hyperkeratosis | − | − | 30% |
| Photosensitivity | − | − | +/− |
| Hair | 50% | ||
| Sparse hair | + | + | |
| Absent eyelashes | + | + | |
| Sparse/absent eyebrows | + | + | |
| Alopecia areata | + | − | |
| Dental abnormalities | + | − | 27–59% |
| Growth | |||
| Low birth weight | + | + | + |
| Short stature | + | + | + |
| Skeleton | 68–75% | ||
| Radial ray defects | − | − | 20% |
| Metaphyseal changes | + | − | + |
| Osteopenia/osteoporosis | + | + | + |
| Small patellae | + | − | + |
| Ocular lesions | |||
| Cataract | − | − | 10–50% |
| Gastrointestinal features | 17% | ||
| Oesophageal or pyloric stenosis | + | − | |
| Feeding problems | + | − | |
| Chronic emesis/diarrhoea | + | − | |
| Hematologic abnormalities | Hodgkin’s lymphoma | − | Occasionally |
| Cancer | |||
| Osteosarcoma | − | − | 30% |
| Skin cancer | − | − | 5% |
| Lymphoma | + | − | Two casesb |
| Neurocognitive development | No specific data available | ||
| Mild intellectual disability | + | + | |
| Cytogenetic abnormalities | Mosaic trisomy 8 (15%) | Mosaic trisomy 8 (13%) | Cases reported with Mosaic trisomy 2, 7 or 8 |
| Mosaic isochromosome 8q (13%)c | Mosaic isochromosome 8q (9%)c | Mosaic isochromosome 2, 7 or 8 | |
|
| + | + | 66% |
aFrequencies derived from [2, 8, 16, 17]
bCases reported by Siitonen 2009 and Simon 2010 [13, 14]
cBased on interphase FISH (2 probes: LSI MYC, 8q24) on 400 lymphocytes nuclei in blood
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| • Osteoma cutis was not a known feature in Rothmund-Thomson patients. |
| • Intellectual disability may be considered a rare feature in RTS; more study is needed. |
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| • RTS is a well-described syndrome caused by mutations in the |
| • Patients with RTS frequently show chromosomal abnormalities like, e.g. mosaic trisomy 8. |