| Literature DB >> 31200655 |
Chamara Sampath Paththinige1,2, Nirmala Dushyanthi Sirisena3, Fabienne Escande4, Sylvie Manouvrier5, Florence Petit5, Vajira Harshadeva Weerabaddana Dissanayake3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Split hand/foot malformation (SHFM) is a group of congenital skeletal disorders which may occur either as an isolated abnormality or in syndromic forms with extra-limb manifestations. Chromosomal micro-duplication or micro-triplication involving 17p13.3 region has been described as the most common cause of split hand/foot malformation with long bone deficiency (SHFLD) in several different Caucasian and Asian populations. Gene dosage effect of the extra copies of BHLHA9 gene at this locus has been implicated in the pathogenesis of SHFLD. CASEEntities:
Keywords: 17p13.3 duplication; BHLHA9; Ectrodactyly; Split hand/foot malformation; Split hand/foot malformation with long bone deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31200655 PMCID: PMC6570964 DOI: 10.1186/s12881-019-0839-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Fig. 1Clinical photographs of the hands and the feet of the proband showing ectrodactyly involving three limbs, with the absence of the third digit on the left hand, absence of 2 digits on the right hand with malformed fingers (except the thumb) and the fixed clubfoot deformity with only 2 toes on the right foot
Fig. 2Radiological images of the upper limbs and pelvis of the proband showing complete absence of the metacarpal and the phalanges of the third digit on the left hand and absent metacarpals and phalanges of two digits on the right hand. Rest of the upper limbs and upper femur were radiologically normal
Fig. 3Clinical photographs of the hands of the mother showing bilateral ectrodactyly involving both hands, with the absence of the third digit on the right hand and two digits on the left hand, with bi-phalangeal left 5th digit
Studies describing the 17p13.3 duplication/ triplications associated with SHFM or SHFLD
| Reference [No.] | No. of families/ individuals with duplication/ triplication (a) | Limb anomalies of affected individuals | Extra-limb manifestations | Special remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ezirovitz et al., 2008 [ | 1 family 9 affected individuals | SHFM (4), SHFLD [tibial hemimelia] (3), Tibial hemimelia/aplasia only (2) | No | Autosomal dominant (AD) inheritance/ Variable expressivity (VE)/, Incomplete penetrance (IP), Defined candidate region to 17p13.1 – 17p13.3; ~ 861 kb |
| Armour et al., 2011 [ | 3 families (?1 with triplicationa) with 12 affected individuals 7 with duplication: 6 affected, 1 unaffected | Split hand only (3), SHFLD [tibial hypoplasia/aplasia] (9) | No | AD inheritance/ VE/ IP Defined critical region of ~ 173 kb, ? |
| Klopocki et al., 2011 [ | 17 families (out of 56) 82 with duplication: 42 affected, 40 unaffected | SHFLD [tibial hemimelia] (18/31) Only SHFM (5) | No | AD inheritance/ VE/ IP Sex bias: (Male>Female), affected females with more severe phenotype Defined critical region of ~ 11.8 kb encompassing only |
| Petit et al., 2013 [ | 2 affected with duplication | Case 1 SHFLD [R/radial agenesis and hypoplastic R/ulna and L/radial hypoplasia] Case 2 SHFM only | Case 1 small ASD | Involvement of radius reported for the first time |
| Curry et al., 2013 [ | 1 affected 14 families in this report (total of 21 families analyzed) with 17p13.3 duplications that includes | SHFLD [tibial hemimelia] | Cleft palate, Mild ID | |
| Luk et al., 2014 [ | 1 affected fetusa Unaffected mothera both with duplication | Split hands | No | First case with prenatal genetic diagnosis |
| Petit et al., 2014 [ | 13 families with 42 affected individuals and 19 unaffected obligate carriers; 29 with the duplication (20 affected, 9 unaffected) | SHFLD (18) | No | AD inheritance/ VE/ IP Involvement of radius in 2 individuals Femur hypoplasia in one patient Affected males with more severe phenotype |
| Al Kaissi et al., 2014 [ | 1 affected Father- bilateral partial syndactyly | SHFM, tibial hemimelia | Sacral hypoplasia, DD, Thrombocyto-penia | |
| Nagata et al., 2014 [ | 27 families 64 with the duplication/triplication (42/42 affected patients, 22/47 unaffected relatives); 2/1000 Japanese controls positive for duplication | SHFM (29), SHFLD (11), GWC (2) | NR | No sex bias SHFLD and GWC more common in triplications |
| Nagata et al., 2015 [ | 1 affected childa Unaffected mothera both with triplication | SHFM with tibial aplasia (R)/ hypoplasia (L) and wide R/ distal femoral metaphysis (GWC-like malformation) | No | |
| Cho et al., 2015 [ | 1 affected fetus with the duplication | SHFLD, campomelia of R/femur, Bilateral agenesis of fibula, bilateral club feet, oligosyndactyly | No | |
| Fusco et al., 2017 [ | 3 affected with the duplication | SHFLD; tibial hypoplasia (2) One with isolated tibial hypoplasia | One with ASD | |
| Shen et al., 2018 [ | 1 family with 5 affected individuals, 4 affected fetuses 10 tested (8 individuals, 2 fetuses) 8 with the duplication; 6 affected, 2 unaffected | SFFM (4) SHFLD (1), bilateral femoral hypoplasia | No | |
Present report 2018 | 1 affected child Affected mother | SHFM (?with tibial hemimelia) | No |
ASD Atrial septal defect, DD Developmental delay, GWC Goellop Woolfgang Complex, ID Intellectual disability, R Right, L Left
aIndividuals with 17p13.3 triplication