Further delineation of Malan syndrome.
Manuela PrioloDenny SchanzeKatrin Tatton-BrownPaul A MulderJair TenorioKreepa KooblallInés Hernández AceroFowzan S AlkurayaPedro AriasLaura BernardiniEmilia K BijlsmaTrevor ColeChristine CoubesIrene DapiaSally DaviesNataliya Di DonatoNursel H ElciogluJill A FahrnerAlison FosterNoelia García GonzálezIlka HuberMaria IasconeAnn-Sophie KaiserArveen KamathJan LiebeltSally Ann LynchSaskia M MaasCorrado MammìInge B MathijssenShane McKeeLeonie A MenkeGhayda M MirzaaTara MontgomeryDorothee NeubauerThomas E NeumannLetizia PintomalliMaria Antonietta PisantiAstrid S PlompSue PriceClaire SalterFernando Santos-SimarroPierre SardaMabel SegoviaCharles Shaw-SmithSarah SmithsonMohnish SuriRita Maria ValdezArie Van HaeringenJohanna M Van HagenMarcela ZollinoPablo LapunzinaRajesh V ThakkerMartin ZenkerRaoul C M HennekamPublished in: Human mutation (2018)
Malan syndrome is an overgrowth disorder described in a limited number of individuals. We aim to delineate the entity by studying a large group of affected individuals. We gathered data on 45 affected individuals with a molecularly confirmed diagnosis through an international collaboration and compared data to the 35 previously reported individuals. Results indicate that height is > 2 SDS in infancy and childhood but in only half of affected adults. Cardinal facial characteristics include long, triangular face, macrocephaly, prominent forehead, everted lower lip, and prominent chin. Intellectual disability is universally present, behaviorally anxiety is characteristic. Malan syndrome is caused by deletions or point mutations of NFIX clustered mostly in exon 2. There is no genotype-phenotype correlation except for an increased risk for epilepsy with 19p13.2 microdeletions. Variants arose de novo, except in one family in which mother was mosaic. Variants causing Malan and Marshall-Smith syndrome can be discerned by differences in the site of stop codon formation. We conclude that Malan syndrome has a well recognizable phenotype that usually can be discerned easily from Marshall-Smith syndrome but rarely there is some overlap. Differentiation from Sotos and Weaver syndrome can be made by clinical evaluation only.