Dual Diagnosis of Ellis-van Creveld Syndrome and Hearing Loss in a Consanguineous Family

Multilocus analysis of rare or genetically heterogeneous diseases is a distinct advantage of next-generation sequencing (NGS) over conventional single-gene investigations. Recent studies have begun to uncover an under-recognized prevalence of dual molecular diagnoses in patients with a “blended” phe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular syndromology 2017-12, Vol.9 (1), p.5-14
Hauptverfasser: Vona, Barbara, Maroofian, Reza, Mendiratta, Geetu, Croken, Matthew, Peng, Siwu, Ye, Xiaoqian, Rezazadeh, Jamileh, Bahena, Paulina, Lekszas, Caroline, Haaf, Thomas, Edelmann, Lisa, Shi, Lisong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Multilocus analysis of rare or genetically heterogeneous diseases is a distinct advantage of next-generation sequencing (NGS) over conventional single-gene investigations. Recent studies have begun to uncover an under-recognized prevalence of dual molecular diagnoses in patients with a “blended” phenotype that is the result of 2 clinical diagnoses involving 2 separate genetic loci. This blended phenotype could be mistakenly interpreted as a novel clinical extension of a single-gene disorder. In this study, we ascertained a proband from a large consanguineous Iranian family who manifests postlingual, progressive, moderate hearing loss in addition to suspected Ellis-van Creveld syndrome phenotype. NGS with a customized skeletal dysplasia panel containing over 370 genes and subsequent bioinformatics analysis disclosed 2 homozygous mutations in EVC2 (c.2653C>T; p.Arg885*) and COL11A2 (c.966dup; p.Thr323Hisfs*19), respectively. This study highlights a dual molecular diagnosis in a patient with a blending of 2 distinct phenotypes and illustrates the advantage and importance of this staple technology to facilitate rapid and comprehensive genetic dissection of a heterogeneous phenotype. The differentiation between phenotypic expansion of a genetic disorder and a blended phenotype that is due to more than one distinct genetic aberration is essential in order to reduce the diagnostic odyssey endured by patients.
ISSN:1661-8769
1661-8777
DOI:10.1159/000480458