Cross-sectional and longitudinal findings in patients with proximal 22q11.2 duplication: A retrospective chart study.
Jente VerbesseltInge ZinkJeroen BreckpotAnn SwillenPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2021)
Duplications on Chromosome 22q11.2 (22q11.2 dup) are associated with a wide spectrum of physical and neurodevelopmental features. In this chart review, physical, developmental, and behavioral features of 28 patients with 22q11.2 dup (median age = 17.11 years) are reported, and phenotypes of de novo and inherited duplications are compared. Common medical anomalies include nutritional problems (57%), failure to thrive (33%), transient hearing impairment (52%), and congenital heart defects (33%). Developmental, speech-language, and motor delay are common in infancy, while attention (64%), learning (60%), and motor problems (52%) are typically reported at primary school age. Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorders are diagnosed in 44%. Median full-scale intelligence quotient is in the borderline range (IQ 76), with one-fifth of patients having mild intellectual disability. Longitudinal data in 11 patients, with the first assessment at a median age of 5.2 years and the second assessment at a median age of 8.8 years, indicate that almost two-third of patients have a relative stable cognitive trajectory, whereas one-third show a growing into deficit profile. In patients with de novo duplications, there is a trend of more failure to thrive, while more patients with inherited duplications follow special education.
Keyphrases
- cross sectional
- intellectual disability
- mental health
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- autism spectrum disorder
- physical activity
- working memory
- prognostic factors
- gene expression
- patient reported outcomes
- dna methylation
- big data
- copy number
- hearing loss
- deep learning
- cerebral ischemia
- genome wide
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- blood brain barrier