CHEDDA syndrome is an underrecognized neurodevelopmental disorder with a highly restricted ATN1 mutation spectrum
MICHAUD, Vincent
Laboratoire Maladies Rares: Génétique et Métabolisme (Bordeaux) [U1211 INSERM/MRGM]
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Laboratoire Maladies Rares: Génétique et Métabolisme (Bordeaux) [U1211 INSERM/MRGM]
Language
EN
Article de revue
This item was published in
Clinical Genetics. 2021-07-01, vol. 100, n° 4, p. 468-477
English Abstract
We describe the clinical features of nine unrelated individuals with rare de novo missense or in-frame deletions/duplications within the « HX motif » of exon 7 of ATN1. We previously proposed that individuals with such ...Read more >
We describe the clinical features of nine unrelated individuals with rare de novo missense or in-frame deletions/duplications within the « HX motif » of exon 7 of ATN1. We previously proposed that individuals with such variants should be considered as being affected by the syndromic condition of congenital hypotonia, epilepsy, developmental delay, and digital anomalies (CHEDDA), distinct from dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) secondary to expansion variants in exon 5 of ATN1. We confirm that the universal phenotypic features of CHEDDA are distinctive facial features and global developmental delay. Infantile hypotonia and minor hand and feet differences are common and can present as arthrogryposis. Common comorbidities include severe feeding difficulties, often requiring gastrostomy support, as well as visual and hearing impairments. Epilepsy and congenital malformations of the brain, heart, and genitourinary systems are frequent but not universal. Our study confirms the clinical entity of CHEDDA secondary to a mutational signature restricted to exon 7 of ATN1. We propose a clinical schedule for assessment upon diagnosis, surveillance, and early intervention including the potential of neuroimaging for prognostication.Read less <
English Keywords
Arthrogryposis
Developmental delay
Genetics
Genomics
Intellectual disability
Neurodevelopmental disorder
Rare diseases