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Prenatal and infantile diagnosis of craniosynostosis in individuals with RASopathies.

Carolyn R SerbinskiApril VanderwalSarah E ChadwellAna Isabel SanchezRobert J HopkinRobert B HufnagelKathryn Nicole WeaverCarlos E Prada
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2023)
Fetuses with RASopathies can have a wide variety of anomalies including increased nuchal translucency, hydrops fetalis, and structural anomalies (typically cardiac and renal). There are few reports that describe prenatal-onset craniosynostosis in association with a RASopathy diagnosis. We present clinical and molecular characteristics of five individuals with RASopathy and craniosynostosis. Two were diagnosed with craniosynostosis prenatally, 1 was diagnosed as a neonate, and 2 had evidence of craniosynostosis noted as neonates without formal diagnosis until later. Two of these individuals have Noonan syndrome (PTPN11 and KRAS variants) and three individuals have Cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome (KRAS variants). Three individuals had single suture synostosis and two had multiple suture involvement. The most common sutures involved were sagittal (n = 3), followed by coronal (n = 3), and lambdoid (n = 2) sutures. This case series confirms craniosynostosis as one of the prenatal findings in individuals with RASopathies and emphasizes the importance of considering a RASopathy diagnosis in fetuses with multiple anomalies in combination with craniosynostosis.
Keyphrases
  • pregnant women
  • copy number
  • left ventricular
  • case report
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • single molecule