Clinical presentation of 13 patients with subtelomeric rearrangements and a review of the literature

To re‐examine the potential clinical indications for subtelomeric FISH testing and to provide additional cases to the growing literature on subtelomeric abnormalities and their genotype‐phenotype correlations, we present a single center case series of 13 patients with chromosomal abnormalities detec...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of medical genetics 2004-08, Vol.128A (4), p.352-363
Hauptverfasser: Roberts, Amy E., Cox, Gerald F., Kimonis, Virginia, Lamb, Allen, Irons, Mira
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container_issue 4
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container_title American journal of medical genetics
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creator Roberts, Amy E.
Cox, Gerald F.
Kimonis, Virginia
Lamb, Allen
Irons, Mira
description To re‐examine the potential clinical indications for subtelomeric FISH testing and to provide additional cases to the growing literature on subtelomeric abnormalities and their genotype‐phenotype correlations, we present a single center case series of 13 patients with chromosomal abnormalities detected by subtelomeric FISH testing over a 21 month period. The most common abnormality involved chromosome 1p (23%). Partial monosomy was present in 69% of the patients, complex rearrangements in 23%, and partial trisomy in 8%. The mean time from first normal karyotype to positive subtelomeric FISH result was 3.8 years (n = 11, median 3.5 years, range: 6 months–10 years). One patient had an abnormal high resolution karyotype recognized retrospectively, and two other patients had abnormal karyotypes that were fully deciphered only after subtelomeric FISH analysis. Eighty five percent of cases occurred de novo. The subtelomeric FISH results were useful for adjusting the recurrence risks and helping to focus medical screening and monitoring. The results impacted family planning and satisfied families in search of a diagnosis. Our findings support the use of subtelomeric FISH analysis as a second tier test in patients suspected of having a chromosomal abnormality with a normal karyotype. Potential benefits of subtelomeric FISH testing include faster time to diagnosis, better informed patient prognosis, and more accurate genetic counseling. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ajmg.a.30142
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subjects Abnormalities, Multiple - genetics
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child, Preschool
Chromosome Aberrations
Chromosome Deletion
cryptic chromosome abnormalities
Female
General aspects. Genetic counseling
Genetic Testing - methods
Humans
In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence - methods
Male
Medical genetics
Medical sciences
monosomy
rearrangement
subtelomeric FISH
Telomere
Trisomy
title Clinical presentation of 13 patients with subtelomeric rearrangements and a review of the literature
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