Rare Causes and Differential Diagnosis in Patients With Silver-Russell Syndrome

Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS) is an imprinting disorder mainly characterized by pre- and postnatal growth restriction. Most SRS cases are due to 11p15.5 loss of methylation (11p15.5 LOM) or maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 7 [UPD(7)mat], but several patients remain molecularly undiagnosed....

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical genetics 2024-11
Hauptverfasser: Braga, Barbara Leitao, da Cunha Scalco, Renata, Homma, Thais Kataoka, Freire, Bruna Lucheze, Cellin, Laurana De Polli, Canton, Ana Pinheiro Machado, Lerario, Antônio Marcondes, de Assis Funari, Mariana Ferreira, de Souza, Vinicius, Bertola, Debora Romeo, Malaquias, Alexsandra Christianne, Mendonca, Berenice Bilharinho, de Lima Jorge, Alexander Augusto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS) is an imprinting disorder mainly characterized by pre- and postnatal growth restriction. Most SRS cases are due to 11p15.5 loss of methylation (11p15.5 LOM) or maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 7 [UPD(7)mat], but several patients remain molecularly undiagnosed. This study describes the molecular investigation of children with a clinical diagnosis or suspicion of SRS at a tertiary center specialized in growth disorders. Thirty-nine patients were evaluated with multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, chromosomal microarray and/or massively parallel sequencing. The most common result was 11p15.5 LOM (n = 17; 43.5%), followed by UPD(7)mat (n = 2; 5.1%). Additionally, we found maternal duplications of the imprinting centers in 11p15.5 (n = 2; 5.1%), and genetic defects in SRS-causing genes (IGF2 and HMGA2) (n = 3; 7.7%; two mutations and one deletion). Alternative molecular diagnoses included UPD(14)mat (n = 1; 2,6%), UPD(20)mat (n = 1;2,6%), copy number variants (n = 2; 5.1%), and mutations in genes associated with other growth disorders (n = 4; 10.3%), leading to diagnoses of Temple syndrome, Mulchandani-Bhoj-Conlin syndrome, IGF-1 resistance (IGF1R), Bloom syndrome (BLM), Gabriele-De Vries syndrome (YY1), Intellectual developmental disorder autosomal dominant 50 with behavioral abnormalities (NAA15), and Intellectual developmental disorder 64 (ZNF292). These findings underscore the importance of establishing the molecular diagnosis of SRS and its differential diagnoses to guide appropriate management and genetic counseling.
ISSN:0009-9163
1399-0004
1399-0004
DOI:10.1111/cge.14659