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Isolated cytokine-enriched pericardial effusion: A likely key feature for Aymé-Gripp syndrome.

Anna-Lina KönigHemmen SabirBrigitte StritzekUlrich GembruchUlrike HerbergMiriam BertrandUte GrasshoffGesa WiegandCornelia WiechersEugenia BernisHeiko Martin ReutterAndreas Müller
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2021)
Aymé-Gripp syndrome is a multisystemic disorder caused by a heterozygous variation in the MAF gene (OMIM*177075). Key features are congenital cataracts, sensorineural hearing loss, and a characteristic facial appearance. In a proportion of individuals, pericardial effusion or pericarditis has been reported as part of the phenotypic spectrum. In the present case, a large persistent cytokine-enriched pericardial effusion was the main pre- and postnatal symptom that led to the clinical and later molecular diagnosis of Aymé-Gripp syndrome. In the postnatal course, the typical Aymé-Gripp syndrome-associated features bilateral cataracts and hearing loss were diagnosed. We propose that activating dominant variants in the cytokine-modulating transcription factor c-MAF causes cytokine-enriched pericardial effusions possibly representing a key feature of Aymé-Gripp syndrome.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • transcription factor
  • machine learning
  • preterm infants
  • gene expression
  • deep learning
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • hearing loss
  • patient reported