| Literature DB >> 33327285 |
Na Shen1, Xiong Wang1, Yanjun Lu1, Fang Xiao2, Juan Xiao3.
Abstract
RATIONALE: Juvenile polyposis syndrome (JPS) is a rare genetic gastrointestinal disorder with hidden and variable clinical features. Early detection is crucial for good prognosis. PATIENT CONCERNS: A 20-year-old female went to hospital for fever, and was unexpectedly diagnosed as JPS during treatment. She reported no clinical signs or family history of JPS. DIAGNOSIS: Blood routine examination on hospital admission suggested a moderate anemia. Bone marrow cytology and leukemia fusion gene test were performed to rule out leukemia. Other examinations including ultrasound and computed tomography were also conducted for differential diagnosis. Further electronic colonoscopy identified more than 20 pedicle polyps located at her ileocecum and rectum. Mutation analysis detected a novel de novo pathogenic variant, c.910C>T (p.Gln304Ter) within bone morphogenetic protein receptor type 1A gene, establishing the diagnosis of JPS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33327285 PMCID: PMC7738017 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000023494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Figure 1A novel de novo causative variant (BMPR1A: c.910C>T [p.Gln304Ter]) was identified in this family. A, Pedigree analysis. B, Sanger sequencing of this family. C, Protein structure prediction of this variant using the Swiss-model tool. D, Gene structure of BMPR1A and the identified variant.
Classification of the candidate variant according to ACMG guidelines.
| Mutation type | Nonsense, leading to a premature termination codon for NMD (PVS1) |
| Pedigree analysis | Only detected in the patient but not in her unaffected parents (PS2) |
| Population data∗ | Absent in multiple normal population databases, including ExAC, 1000GP, genomeAD, and dbSNP (PM2) |
| Computational evidences† | Multiple computational evidences (MutationTaster and VarCards) supported a deleterious effect on |
| Conclusion | Pathogenic (1 PVS1 + 1 PS2) |
1000GP = 1000 genomes project, ExAC = exome aggregation consortium, NMD = nonsense-mediated decay, PM = pathogenic moderate, PP = pathogenic supporting, PS = pathogenic strong, PVS = pathogenic very strong.
ExAC, http://exac.broadinstitute.org/); 1000GP, http://www.internationalgenome.org/1000-genomes-browsers; genomeAD, https://gnomad.broadinstitute.org/; dbSNP, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/snp/.
MutationTaster, http://www.mutationtaster.org/; VarCards, http://159.226.67.237/sun/varcards/welcome.
Extended phenotypic spectrum beyond JPS attributed to pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants of BMPR1A.
| Disease phenotype | Disease description | Mean/median age at diagnosis | Detection method | Mutation type∗ | Mutation proportion | Other conditions | Reference |
| HMPS | Polyps are mixed adenomatous, hyperplastic, or atypical juvenile histology, probably eventually leading to CRC. | 33–61 y | Sequence analysis and MLPA | Large genomic deletion, small deletion, or nonsense | 4/8 families (50%) | CRC, thyroid cancer and wilms tumor | [ |
| Other polyposis | Including unexplained hereditary adenomatous polyposis > 100 polyps, unexplained adenomatous polyposis with unknown inheritance, and mixed polyposis | 50 y | NGS and CNV analysis | Frameshift, splicing or missense | 3/23 patients (13%) | A patient with an atypical polyposis carrying both | [ |
| FCCTX | It is a type of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer based on Amsterdam criteria for Lynch syndrome, which has no germline mutation in MMR, and the tumors are microsatellite stable. | 54.6 y | Genetic linkage analysis and mutation analysis | Small deletion | 2/18 families (11%) | CRC, lymphoma, scirrhous carcinoma in breast, etc. | [ |
| Sporadic early-onset CRC with MMR proficiency | Early-onset (<50 y) CRC without MMR deficiency, no previous polyposis and no CRC family history | NA | Affymetrix 6.0 array | Large genomic deletion (a 7.326-Mb heterozygous deletion in the 10q22-q23 region including | NA | NA | [ |
| Superior coloboma | A congenital ocular anomaly characterized by gaps in the tissues of the superior eye | 9.5 y | NGS and functional experiment | Missense | 1/5 patients (20%) | NA | [ |
| CHD | A most common organ malformations in the newborns, including atrioventricular septal defects, an atrial septal defect, and a ventricular septal defect. | NA | Genome-wide human SNP Array 6.0 and functional experiment | Missense | 12/19 members in one family | A single patient suffered from “severe malformations” before his death during the first days after birth. No extra-cardiac anomalies were reported in this family. | [ |
CHD = congenital heart diseases, CNV = copy number variation, FCCTX = familial colorectal cancer type X, HMPS = hereditary mixed polyposis syndrome, MLPA = multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, MMR = mismatch repair gene, MMR = mismatch repair gene, NA = not available, NGS = next-generation sequencing.
All pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants above were heterozygous.
Comparisons between features of BMPR1A and SMAD4∗.
| BMPR1A | SMAD4 | |
| Chromosome location | 10q23.2 | 18q21.2 |
| Common core pathway | TGF-β signaling pathway, BMP signaling pathway | |
| JPS | ||
| Inheritance model | Autosomal dominant | |
| Median age at diagnosis | 18.5 y | |
| Cumulative risks of CRC | 38% to 68% (average age at diagnosis: 34–44 y) | |
| Cumulative risks of extra-colorectal cancer | 21% of incidence of upper GI cancer including stomach, pancreas, and small bowel (average age at diagnosis: 54 y) | |
| Proportion of JPS attributed to PV | 28% | 27% |
| Proportion of PV by detected methods | 69% to 85% by sequence analysis, and 15% by large deletion/duplication analysis. | 83% by sequence analysis and 17% by large deletion/duplication analysis. |
| Clinical features | NO obvious symptoms; nonspecific symptoms including digestive symptoms and anemia could occur in some patients. | A higher frequency of gastric polyposis; and often accompanied by extra-GI symptoms such as HHT features (epistaxis, telangiectases, visceral AVM, etc.) |
| Related diseases beyond JPS | HMPS, polyposis, GI cancers, superior coloboma, and CHD | HHT, GI cancers, Myhre syndrome, Loeys-Dietz syndrome, cholangiocarcinoma, and TAAD |
| Surveillance | Complete blood count, colonoscopy, and upper endoscopy should begin at age of 15 y or at the occurrence of initial symptoms, whichever is earlier. Genetic testing should be offered to children at risk for carrying PV of SMAD4 before age 15 y, because the surveillance for HHT-associated findings should begin earlier than the surveillance for polyps. | |
Data were summarized from GeneReviews (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK1116/), Genetics Home Reference (https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov), and ACG Clinical Guideline.[