When Familial Hearing Loss Means Genetic Heterogeneity: A Model Case Report.
Camille CenniLuke MansardCatherine BlanchetDavid BauxChristel VachéCorinne BaudoinMélodie MoclynValérie FaugèreMichel MondainEric JeziorskiAnne-Françoise RouxMarjolaine WillemsPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
We describe a family with both hearing loss (HL) and thrombocytopenia, caused by pathogenic variants in three genes. The proband was a child with neonatal thrombocytopenia, childhood-onset HL, hyper-laxity and severe myopia. The child's mother (and some of her relatives) presented with moderate thrombocytopenia and adulthood-onset HL. The child's father (and some of his relatives) presented with adult-onset HL. An HL panel analysis, completed by whole exome sequencing, was performed in this complex family. We identified three pathogenic variants in three different genes: MYH9, MYO7A and ACTG1. The thrombocytopenia in the child and her mother is explained by the MYH9 variant. The post-lingual HL in the paternal branch is explained by the MYO7A variant, absent in the proband, while the congenital HL of the child is explained by a de novo ACTG1 variant. This family, in which HL segregates, illustrates that multiple genetic conditions coexist in individuals and make patient care more complex than expected.