| Literature DB >> 28751920 |
Chariyawan Charalsawadi1, Juthamas Wirojanan2, Somchit Jaruratanasirikul2, Nichara Ruangdaraganon3, Alan Geater4, Pornprot Limprasert1.
Abstract
Background. Clinical characteristics of fragile X syndrome (FXS) have been well documented in Caucasians, whereas in Asians they have rarely been described. Those that have been conducted used small cohorts that utilized DNA for diagnosis and larger cohorts that utilized cytogenetics for diagnosis. This study is to describe clinical characteristics of FXS in a large cohort of Thai patients diagnosed by standard molecular methods. Methods. Seventy-seven index cases and 46 affected relatives diagnosed with FXS were recruited into the study. To determine frequencies of common characteristics of FXS in prepubertal boys, we reviewed 56 unrelated cases aged between 18 and 146 months. To list rare medical problems, we reviewed 75 cases aged between 8 months to 71 years old, including 53 index cases and 22 affected relatives. In addition, we selected 16 clinical studies from various ethnicities for comparison with our findings. Results. In prepubertal boys with FXS, attention deficit and/or hyperactivity, prominent ears, macroorchidism, and elongated face were observed in 96%, 80%, 53%, and 48% of patients, respectively, whereas recognizable X-linked inheritance presented in 11% of patients. IQ scores ranged between 30 and 64 (mean ± SD = 43 ± 9, n = 25). We observed clinical findings that rarely or have never been reported, for example, medulloblastoma and tetralogy of Fallot. Conclusion. Attention deficit and/or hyperactivity and prominent ear are the most common behavioral and physical features in prepubertal boys with FXS, respectively. There are differences in frequencies of clinical characteristics observed between ethnicities; however, it is difficult to draw a solid conclusion due to different recruitment criteria and sample sizes within each study.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28751920 PMCID: PMC5511659 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9318346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Common clinical characteristics observed in patients with FXS.
| Region | America | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | East and South East Asia | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Lachiewicz et al. 2000 [ | Giangreco et al. 1996 [ | Merenstein et al. 1996 [ | Merenstein et al. 1996 [ | Crabbe et al. 1993 [ | Butler et al. 1991 [ | de Vries et al. 1999 [ | Arvio et al. 1997 [ | Behery 2008 [ | Alanay et al. 2007 [ | Demirhan et al. 2003 [ | Bastaki et al. 2004 [ | Iqbal et al. 2000 [ | Kanwal et al. 2015 [ | Guruju et al. 2009 [ | Verma and Elango 1994 [ | H. R. Moon and S. Y. Moon 1993 [ | Our studyl |
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
| Elongated face | 83% | 33% | 62% | 79% | NA | NA | 51% | NA | 35% | 83% | 29% | 100% | NA | 38% | 32% | 60% | 90% | 48% |
| Large ear (L)/prominent ears (P)/both (B) | 72% (L) | 83% (L) | 24% (L) | 45% (L) | 100% (L) | 95% (L) | 27% (B) | 84% (L) | 53% (B) | 90% (L/P) | 43% (P) | 90% (L) | 30% (L) | 46% (L/P) | 88% (L) | 60% (L/P) | 90% (L) | 59% (L) |
| Macroorchidism | 63% | NA | 54% | 91% | 19% | 84% | 59% | 89% | 21% | 23% | 11% | 55% | 15% | NA | 94% | 30% | 70% | 53% |
| High-arched palate | 94% | NA | 50% | 53% | 63% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 21% | 100% | NA | NA | NA | 20% | NA | 21% |
| Flat feet | 69% | NA | 82% | 54% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 30% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 21% |
| Hyperextensible joint | 100% | NA | 82% | 46% | 82% | 58% | 41% | 57% | 47% | 76% | 7% | 100% | NA | 15% | 68% | NA | NA | 38% |
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
| Hyperactivity (H)/attention deficit (A)/both (B) | NA | 59% (B) | 89% (H) | 69% (H) | NA | 63% (A) | NA | 57% (B) | 44% (H) | 23% (B) | 71% (A) | 85% (B) | 92% (H) | 69% (B) | 80% (A) | 70% (H) | 80% (A) | 75% (B) |
| Autism/autistic-like | NA | 50% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 15% | 32% | 29% | 45% | 0% | NA | NA | NA | 60% | 27% |
| Shyness | NA | NA | 58% | 73% | NA | NA | NA | 68% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 30% | 20% |
| Aggressiveness | NA | NA | 59% | 54% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 36% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 21% |
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
| FH of ID | 69% | 59% | NA | NA | NA | 74% | 78% | 30% | 68% | 66% | 50% | 70% | 46% | 46% | 92% | NA | NA | 41% |
| Diagnostic methods | CG, DNA | CG, SB | PCR, SB | PCR, SB | CG | CG | PCR, SB | CG | RT-PCR | SB | CG | CG, PCR | CG | PCR, SB | PCR, SB | CG | CG | PCR, SB |
| Sample size (male : female) | 36 : 0 | 11 : 1 | 125 : 0 | 93 : 0 | 16 : 1 | 19 : 0 | 59 : 0 | 20 : 0 | 34 : 0 | 103 : 0 | 9 : 5 | 20 : 0 | 24 : 2 | 10 : 3 | 25 : 0 | 20 | 10 : 0 | 56 : 0 |
| Age range (years) | NA | 1.5–33 | 3–12 | >12 | 4–13 | 3.7–71.9 | NA | 21–54 | 2–20 | 2–22 | 2–12 | Pre puberty (45%) | NA | NA | 4–12 years (20%) | <10 years (65%) | 2–10.2 | 1.5–12.2 |
| Mean age | 6.2 (±2.4) | 7.9 | 6.4 (±3.0) | 22.4 (±8.7) | 8.3 | 21.3 | NA | 31.7 (±11.0) | NA | 7.2 (±4.0) | 6.6 (±3.2) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 6.2 (±2.6) | 6.3 (±3.0) |
|
| ||||||||||||||||||
| Country | USA | USA | USA | USA | USA | USA | Nether-lands | Finland | Egypt | Turkey | Turkey | Kuwait | Saudi Arabia | Pakistan | India | India | South Korea | Thailand |
aData from 34 Caucasians and 2 African Americans. bCombined data from males with fully methylation, males with partial methylation, and males with mosaic FM/PM. Mean age and sample size for prepubertal males in fully methylation group, partial methylation group, and mosaic group were 6.4 ± 3 (n = 96), 6.4 ± 3 (n = 5), and 6.9 ± 3.1 (n = 4), respectively. Mean age and sample size for postpubertal males in fully methylation group, partial methylation group, and mosaic group were 22.4 ± 8.7 (n = 64), 22.1 ± 7.5 (n = 7), and 22.6 ± 12.1 (n = 22), respectively. Mean age showed in the table was from fully methylation group. cData from 14 Caucasians and 3 African Americans. dData from 15 Caucasians and 4 African Americans. eHyperextensible metacarpophalangeal digit V was found in 41% of patients and digits V and I in 15% of patients. Macroorchidism for both sides was 59% and for one side or moderate was 9%. fMacroorchidism in prepubertal and postpubertal patients were 23% and 41%, respectively. Pervasive developmental disorder found in 32% of patients. g85% of patients had sibling(s) with ID, and 70% of patients had relative(s) with ID. h95.6% of population, including those with and without FXS, were younger than 20 years old. Of these, 83.4% were 5–15 years old. iAge of all participants (including FXS and non-FXS patients) ranged from 4 to 40 years; mean ± SD 14.3 ± 7.0 years. jAge of participants ranged from 4 to 8 years (4%), 8 to 12 years (16%), 12 to 16 years (12%), and >16 years (68%). kNumber of males and females was not specified. lFamily history of X-linked ID was 11%. Attention deficit and/or hyperactivity were 96%; NA = not available, FH = family history, ID = intellectual disability, PCR = polymerase chain reaction, SB = Southern blot, and CG = cytogenetics.
Figure 1Diagram depicting summary of study design.
Odds ratio showing the effect of clinical items in the 5-item clinical checklist on the likelihood that boys were diagnosed before 8 years old. Clinical items with no statistic difference (p value > 0.05) are not shown.
| Clinical item | Odds ratio (95% confidence interval) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Attention deficit/hyperactivity | 5.38 (1.15–25.22) | 0.033 |
| Prominent/large ear | 5.94 (1.42–24.79) | 0.015 |
Wald test.
Logistic regression analysis showing relationship between ethnicity and main physical characteristics, regardless of pubertal status. Odds ratio and 95% confidence interval for each characteristic are shown.
| Ethnicity | Elongated face | Large ear | Macroorchidism |
|---|---|---|---|
| American | 1a | 1a | 1a |
| European | 0.45b (0.27–0.75) | 4.45b (1.80–10.97) | 0.95a (0.31–2.92) |
| Middle Easterner | 1.06ab (0.32–3.53) | 1.11a (0.22–5.60) | 0.16b (0.06–0.44) |
| South Asian | 0.33b (0.15–0.74) | 3.44ab (0.84–14.00) | 0.93ab (0.11–7.93) |
| East and South East Asian | 0.53ab (0.43–1.17) | 1.95ab (0.69–5.45) | 0.63a (0.24–1.66) |
|
|
|
|
|
Values within columns not having a superscript in common differ significantly (p < 0.05); Wald test.
Rare medical problems observed in patients with FXS in this study and previous reports.
| Medical problem | Number of patients in our study | Previous patient report(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Tetralogy of Fallot | 1a | (i) No previous report in PubMed |
|
| ||
| Medulloblastoma | 1b | (i) Garrè et al. 2009 [ |
|
| ||
| Sotos syndrome-like | 2 | (i) Beemer et al. 1986 [ |
|
| ||
| Prader-Willi syndrome-like | 3 | (i) de Vries et al. 1993 [ |
|
| ||
| Esotropia | 1 | (i) Hatton et al. 1998 [ |
|
| ||
| Astigmatism and hypermetropia | 1 | (i) Hatton et al. 1998 [ |
|
| ||
| Bilateral ptosis | 1 | Ptosis was described in previous literature [ |
|
| ||
| Hypothyroidism | 1 | (i) Bregman et al. 1990 [ |
|
| ||
| Bilateral conductive hearing loss | 1c | (i) Alanay et al. 2007 [ |
|
| ||
| Cleft palate | 1c | Cleft palate was described in previous literature [ |
|
| ||
| Depressive disorder | 1d | (i) Tranebjærg and Ørum 1991 [ |
|
| ||
| Precocious puberty | 1e | (i) Butler and Najjar 1988 [ |
|
| ||
| Primary amenorrhea | 1f | (i) No previous report in PubMed |
|
| ||
| Rectal cancer | 1g | (i) Phelan et al. 1988 [ |
aA 6-year-and-6-month-old boy had tetralogy of Fallot and was a mosaic for FM and PM, bAn 8-year-old boy had medulloblastoma with neuronal and glial differentiation, consistent with WHO grade IV, cA 6-year-8-month-old boy had bilateral conductive hearing loss and cleft palate, dA male was diagnosed with FXS at 11 years old and was suspected of depressive disorder at 23 years old, eA 1-year-old girl had breast development (Tanner III) and mild coarse facies, fA 40-year-old female had severe mental retardation, obesity, mild coarse facies, and primary amenorrhea. Her karyotype was 46,XX. No other investigation such as hormonal study to identify cause of primary amenorrhea, gA 72-year-old female was diagnosed with adenocarcinoma of the rectum at 71 years of age.