| Literature DB >> 34928431 |
Hildegard Kehrer-Sawatzki1, David N Cooper2.
Abstract
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is the most frequent disorder associated with multiple café-au-lait macules (CALM) which may either be present at birth or appear during the first year of life. Other NF1-associated features such as skin-fold freckling and Lisch nodules occur later during childhood whereas dermal neurofibromas are rare in young children and usually only arise during early adulthood. The NIH clinical diagnostic criteria for NF1, established in 1988, include the most common NF1-associated features. Since many of these features are age-dependent, arriving at a definitive diagnosis of NF1 by employing these criteria may not be possible in infancy if CALM are the only clinical feature evident. Indeed, approximately 46% of patients who are diagnosed with NF1 later in life do not meet the NIH diagnostic criteria by the age of 1 year. Further, the 1988 diagnostic criteria for NF1 are not specific enough to distinguish NF1 from other related disorders such as Legius syndrome. In this review, we outline the challenges faced in diagnosing NF1 in young children, and evaluate the utility of the recently revised (2021) diagnostic criteria for NF1, which include the presence of pathogenic variants in the NF1 gene and choroidal anomalies, for achieving an early and accurate diagnosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34928431 PMCID: PMC8807470 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-021-02410-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132
Comparison of the NIH diagnostic clinical criteria for NF1 from 1988 with the newly revised NF1 diagnostic criteria according to Legius et al. (2021)
aLegius et al. (2021) Revised diagnostic criteria for neurofibromatosis type 1 and Legius syndrome: an international consensus recommendation. Genet Med 23:1506–1513
bNeurofibromatosis: conference statement: National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference (1988) Arch Neurol 45:575–578
cIf only café-au-lait macules and freckles are present, the diagnosis is most likely NF1 but exceptionally the individual might have another diagnosis such as Legius syndrome. At least one of the two pigmentary findings (café-au-lait macules or freckles) must be bilateral
dSphenoid wing dysplasia is not a separate criterion in case of an ipsilateral orbital plexiform neurofibroma
eThinning of the long bone cortex turned out not to be the primary lesion. Instead, anterolateral bowing of the lower limb and medullary canal narrowing as well as cortical thickening in the tibia and/or fibula is observed. Therefore, the orthopaedic criterion has been rephrased accordingly
fIn the revised diagnostic criteria, only an affected parent but not affected siblings and offspring qualify as a criterion for NF1. If only siblings are affected, the diagnosis of CMMRD is possible. ‘Offspring’ was omitted because if an adult person has only one diagnostic criterion and one offspring meeting the diagnostic criteria, mosaic NF1 cannot be excluded
Number of café-au-lait macules (CALM) in infants (< 1 year) and older children without a known underlying disorder as determined in 3 different studies
| Alper et al. ( | Whitehouse ( | Burwell et al. ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age of children analysed | Newborn–1 year | 1 Month–5 years | 4–11 years | |
| Total number of children | 4641 | 365 | 542 | Σ = 5548 |
| Children with 1 CALM | 88 (1.9%) | 69 (18.9%) | 146 (26.9%) | Σ = 303 (5.5%) |
| Children with 2 CALM | 26 (0.6%) | 15 (4.1%) | 30 (5.5%) | Σ = 71 (1.3%) |
| Children with 1 or 2 CALM | 114 (2.5%) | 84 (23%) | 176 (32%) | Σ = 374 (6.7%) |
| Children with ≥ 3 CALM | 10 (0.2%) | 1 (0.3%) | 11 (2%) | Σ = 22 (0.4%) |
Studies that have investigated children with isolated CALM but no other NF1-associated disease features and without an affected first-degree relative by means of comprehensive genetic testing of the NF1 gene (and the SPRED1 gene)
| Total number of patients investigated | Age of the patients | Number of CALM | Number of patients with pathogenic variants in the | Number of patients with pathogenic variants in the | Number of patients without a pathogenic variant | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 44 | ≤ 9 Years | ≥ 6 | 28 (63.6%) | 1 (2.3%) | 15 (34.1%) | Giugliano et al. ( |
| 71 | 0–7 Years ( > 7 Years ( age unknown ( | ≥ 6 | 34 (47.9%)a | 3 (4.2%)b | 25 (35.2%) | Castellanos et al. ( |
| 95 | ≤ 14 Months | ≥ 6 | 84 (88.4%) | Not investigated | 11 (11.6%) | Ben-Shachar et al. ( |
| 65 | > 14 Months and ≤ 29 months | ≥ 6 | 45 (69.2%) | Not investigated | 20 (30.8%) | Ben-Shachar et al. ( |
| 38 | ≤ 14 Months | < 6 | 6 (15.8%) | Not investigated | 32 (84.2%) | Ben-Shachar et al. ( |
aIn addition to 34 pathogenic NF1 variants, 7 patients with missense NF1 variants of unknown significance (VUS) were identified. Thus, the total number of NF1 variants identified was N = 41 (57.8%)
bIn addition to 3 pathogenic SPRED1 variants, two patients with SPRED1 variants of unknown significance (VUS) were identified. Thus, the total number of SPRED1 variants identified was N = 5 (7%)
cIn this study, patients under suspicion of segmental NF1 were excluded but children were not tested for possible generalized mosaic NF1
Diagnostic criteria for Legius syndrome according to Legius et al. (2021)
| (A) The diagnostic criteria for Legius syndrome are met in an individual who does not have a parent diagnosed with Legius syndrome if both of the following criteria are present: |
| ≥ 6 Café-au-lait macules bilaterally distributed and no other NF1-related diagnostic criteria except for axillary or inguinal frecklinga |
| A heterozygous pathogenic variant in |
| (B) A child of a parent who meets the diagnostic criteria specified in (A) merits a diagnosis of Legius syndrome if one or more of the criteria in (A) are present |
aThe presence of fewer than 6 café-au-lait macules does not exclude Legius syndrome