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Proposed clinical approach and imaging studies in families with oculo-auriculo-vertebral spectrum to assess variable expressivity.

Bernardette Estandia-OrtegaLiliana Fernández-HernándezMiguel Angel Alcántara-OrtigozaAriadna González-Del Angel
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2022)
A diagnosis of oculo-auriculo-vertebral spectrum (OAVS) is established when microtia is present in association with hemifacial hypoplasia (HH) and/or ocular, vertebral, and/or renal malformations. There is no consensus on which imaging studies should be used to rule out variable expressivity and distinguish "sporadic" from "familial" patients. This observational and descriptive study was performed in a Mexican population of 51 patients (32 males, 19 females, 0-18 years old) with microtia/OAVS, and their available parents. A clinical history, genealogy, and physical examination were obtained from all included patients, as were a computed tomography (CT) scan of the ear, audiological evaluation, orthopantomography, complete spine radiography, and renal ultrasound. The same approach was completed in their available parents (51 mothers and 40 fathers), excluding the CT scan and audiological evaluation. By genealogy, 53% of patients were classified as "sporadic"; of the "familial" patients, at least 79.1% had suggestion of a multifactorial inheritance. In the available parents, orthopantomography, complete spine X-ray, and renal ultrasound identified the following OAVS-related manifestations: HH (16.2%, n = 14/86), vertebral alterations (10.9%, n = 10/91), and renal anomalies (2.2%, n = 2/90). Our evaluation of the parents allowed three patients to be reclassified from "sporadic" to "familial" (5.8%, n = 3/51). Our proposed clinical and imaging approach allowed the identification of variable expressivity that more clearly distinguished between "sporadic" and "familial" OAVS patients, which is of utmost importance in providing proper genetic counseling to these families.
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