| Literature DB >> 32506668 |
Nicole Tartaglia1,2, Susan Howell1,2, Shanlee Davis1,3, Karen Kowal4,5, Tanea Tanda2, Mariah Brown2,3, Cristina Boada2, Amanda Alston4,5, Leah Crawford2, Talia Thompson2, Sophie van Rijn6,7, Rebecca Wilson1,2, Jennifer Janusz1,8, Judith Ross3,4.
Abstract
Sex chromosome trisomies (SCT), including Klinefelter syndrome/XXY, Trisomy X, and XYY syndrome, occur in 1 of every 500 births. The past decades of research have resulted in a broadening of known associated medical comorbidities as well as advances in psychological research. This review summarizes what is known about early neurodevelopmental, behavioral, and medical manifestations in young children with SCT. We focus on recent research and unanswered questions related to the risk for neurodevelopmental disorders that commonly present in the first years of life and discuss the medical and endocrine manifestations of SCT at this young age. The increasing rate of prenatal SCT diagnoses provides the opportunity to address gaps in the existing literature in a new birth cohort, leading to development of the eXtraordinarY Babies Study. This study aims to better describe and compare the natural history of SCT conditions, identify predictors of positive and negative outcomes in SCT, evaluate developmental and autism screening measures commonly used in primary care practices for the SCT population, and build a rich data set linked to a bank of biological samples for future study. Results from this study and ongoing international research efforts will inform evidence-based care and improve health and neurodevelopmental outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Trisomy X; XXY; XYY; neurodevelopment; testosterone
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32506668 PMCID: PMC7413625 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.c.31807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet ISSN: 1552-4868 Impact factor: 3.908