| Literature DB >> 32321479 |
Melissa M Murphy1, T Lindsey Burrell2,3, Joseph F Cubells4, Michael T Epstein5, Roberto Espana6, Michael J Gambello1, Katrina Goines6, Cheryl Klaiman2,3, Sookyong Koh2, Rossana Sanchez Russo1, Celine A Saulnier2,7, Elaine Walker6, Jennifer Gladys Mulle8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: 3q29 deletion syndrome is associated with a range of medical, neurodevelopmental, and psychiatric phenotypes. The deletion is usually de novo but cases have been reported where the deletion is inherited from apparently unaffected parents. The presence of these unaffected or mildly affected individuals suggests there may be an ascertainment bias for severely affected cases of 3q29 deletion syndrome, thus the more deleterious consequence of the 3q29 deletion may be overestimated. However, a substantial fraction of 3q29 deletion syndrome morbidity is due to psychiatric illness. In many case reports, probands and transmitting parents are not systematically evaluated for psychiatric traits. Here we report results from a systematic phenotyping protocol for neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric traits applied to all 3q29 deletion carriers in a multiplex family. CASEEntities:
Keywords: 3q29 deletion; ADHD; CNV disorder; Case Report; Evaluation of genetic syndromes; Psychosis; Schizophrenia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32321479 PMCID: PMC7179007 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02598-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Prior reports of 3q29 deletion multiplex families: summary of evidence for “unaffected” status of transmitting parents
| First author (year) | Number of 3q29 deletion individuals in pedigree | Evaluation of proband | Evaluation of transmitting parent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ballif (2008) [ | 3 | No direct evaluation | No direct evaluation |
| Monfort (2008) [ | 2 | Physical exam | Physical exam |
| Li (2009) [ | 2 | Physical exam | Physical exam |
| Digilio (2009) [ | 2 | Physical exam, cognitive evaluation | Physical exam |
| Digilio (2009) [ | 2 | Physical exam | Physical exam |
| Clayton-Smith (2010) [ | 4 | Proband: Physical exam Older brother: Physical exam, cognitive evaluation | Transmitting parent: Physical exam Transmitting grandparent: Physical exam |
| Petrin (2011) [ | 2 | Physical exam | No evaluationa |
| Kahn (2019) [ | 2 | Physical exam | Physical exam |
aTransmitting parent reported in Petrin et al. [19] was mosaic for the 3q29 deletion
Fig. 1The 3q29 deletion multiplex family; individuals I-1, II-1, II-2, and II-3 were all evaluated in this study
Instruments and evaluations used in this study
| Phenotype and Instrument | II-1 (Proband) | II-2 (8 yo male) | II-3 (4 yo male) | I-1 (39 yo male) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medical history interview, Physical Exam | X | X | X | X |
| General psychopathology | ||||
| K-SADS [ | X | X | X | |
| SCID-5-RV [ | X | |||
| Prodrome/psychosis | ||||
| SIPS [ | X | X | – | X |
| Executive function | ||||
| BRIEF-2 [ | X | X | – | |
| BRIEF-A [ | X | |||
| Adaptive behavior | ||||
| Vineland-3 [ | X | X | X | X |
| Visual-motor integration | ||||
| Beery-Buktenica Developmental test of visual-motor integration, 6th ed. [ | X | X | – | X |
| Anxiety | ||||
| ADIS-P, ADIS-C [ | X | X | – | |
| SCID-5-RV [ | – | X | ||
| Autism | ||||
| ADOS-2 [ | Module 3 | Module 3 | Module 2 | Module 4 |
| ADI-R [ | X | X | X | – |
| Cognitive Ability | ||||
| DAS-II, School Age [ | X | X | ||
| DAS-II, Early Years [ | X | |||
| WASI-II [ | X | |||
Physical exam results (NE, not evaluated)
| System | II-1 (Proband) | II-2 (8 yo male) | II-3 (4 yo male) | I-1 (39 yo male) | Reported Frequency in 3q29 deletion syndrome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Growth | Short stature: 24%2 | ||||
| Weight kg (%tile) | 20.5 (3) | 21.4 (10) | 11.7 kg (< 3) | 77.4 | Microcephaly: 55% |
| Height cm (%tile) | 121 (3) | 126 (35) | 95.6 (3) | 165 | |
| FOC cm (%tile) | 50.76 (35) | 49.5 (3) | 48.75 (10) | 54.5 | |
| Facial dysmorphism | Mild Poor dentition | Mild Poor dentition | Mild Poor dentition | Mild | Dental conditions 66%3 Abnormal teeth: 20%2 |
| Musculoskeletal abnormalities | Flat feet | None noted | Slight joint laxity, flat feet | None noted | Ligamentous laxity: 11%2 |
| GI | Feeding problems, inability to gain weight, fussy eater Poor appetite | Good appetite but inability to gain weight | Good appetite but inability to gain weight | None noted Reflux | Feeding problems: 41%3 |
| Heart defects | none | none | none | none | Heart Defects: 26%3 |
| Skin | Café au lait spots (NF1) | Translucent skin | Psoriasis | Abnormal skin pigmentation: 14%2 | |
| Sleep | No difficulties reported | Sleeps only ~ 3 h/night | Needs little sleep | Difficulty falling asleep | NE |
| Other | -Focal epilepsy -Renal artery stenosis s/p stent/HTN -Right eye wanders -Gags often -Hypermobility | -Not completely toilet trained -Aversion to loud noises -Cold intolerance | -Not toilet trained -Inguinal hernia repair -Sensitive hearing (likes ear defenders) -Poor coordination -Heat/cold intolerance | -Migraines | -Seizures: 5%3 |
Neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric morbidity (NE, not evaluated)
| Phenotype | II-1 (Proband) | II-2 (8 yo male) | II-3 (4 yo male) | I-1 (39 yo male) | Reported Frequency in 3q29 deletion syndrome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADHD, combined type | ADHD, Combined type; Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder; Conduct Disorder with Childhood Onset | ADHD, hyperactive type | ADHD, inattentive type | ADHD: NE | |
| – | Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome | NE | Schizoaffective disorder | Psychosis: 5%3 | |
| Clinically Significant Deficits 86 (> 99) | Clinically Significant Deficits 88 (> 99) | NE | Clinically Significant Deficits 73 (97) | NE | |
Significant Delays 65 (1) | Significant Delays 59 (< 1) | Significant Delays 68 (2) | Significant Delays 61 (< 1) | Global Devel Delay 41%3 | |
Average Range 92 (30) | Significant Delays 77 (6) | Low 83 (13) | Low 83 (13) | NE | |
| – | Separation Anxiety; Specific Phobia of the Dark | NE | Panic disorder; social anxiety disorder | Anxiety: 19%3 | |
| – | – | – | – | Autism: 26%3 | |
Below Average 82 (12) | Low 79 (8) | Average 96 (39) | Average 94 (34) | Intellectual disability: 92%2 |