Copy Number Variations in a Cohort of 420 Individuals with Neurodevelopmental Disorders From the South of Brazil

被引:16
作者
Chaves, Tiago Fernando [1 ]
Baretto, Nathacha [1 ]
de Oliveira, Luan Freitas [1 ]
Ocampos, Maristela [2 ]
Barbato, Ingrid Tremel [2 ]
Anselmi, Mayara [1 ]
De Luca, Gisele Rozone [3 ]
Barbato Filho, Jorge Humberto [2 ]
de Camargo Pinto, Louise Lapagesse [3 ]
Bernardi, Pricila [4 ]
Maris, Angelica Francesca [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Fed Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, SC, Brazil
[2] Lab Neurogene, Florianopolis, SC, Brazil
[3] Childrens Hosp Joana de Gusmao, Florianopolis, SC, Brazil
[4] Univ Hosp Prof Polydoro Ernani de Sao Thiago, Florianopolis, SC, Brazil
关键词
CHROMATIN-REMODELING COMPLEX; INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY; CHROMOSOMAL MICROARRAY; DEVELOPMENTAL DELAY; ARRAY-CGH; GENE; TRANSLOCATIONS; EXPRESSION; MUTATIONS; DIAGNOSIS;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-019-54347-z
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Chromosomal microarray (CMA) is now recommended as first tier for the evaluation in individuals with unexplained neurodevelopmental disorders (ND). However, in developing countries such as Brazil, classical cytogenetic tests are still the most used in clinical practice, as reflected by the scarcity of publications of microarray investigation in larger cohorts. This is a retrospective study which analyses the reading files of CMA and available clinical data from 420 patients from the south of Brazil, mostly children, with neurodevelopmental disorders requested by medical geneticists and neurologists for diagnostic purpose. Previous karyotyping was reported for 138 and includes 17 with abnormal results. The platforms used for CMA were CYTOSCAN 750K (75%) and CYTOSCAN HD (25%). The sex ratio of the patients was 1.625 males :1 female and the mean age was 9.5 years. A total of 96 pathogenic copy number variations (CNVs), 58 deletions and 38 duplications, were found in 18% of the patients and in all chromosomes, except chromosome 11. For 12% of the patients only variants of uncertain clinical significance were found. No clinically relevant CNV was found in 70%. The main referrals for chromosomal microarrays (CMA) were developmental delay (DD), intellectual disability (ID), facial dysmorphism and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). DD/ID were present in 80%, facial dysmorphism in 52% and ASD in 32%. Some phenotypes in this population could be predictive of a higher probability to carry a pathogenic CNV, as follows: dysmorphic facial features (p-value = < 0.0001, OR = 0.32), obesity (p-value = 0.006, OR = 0.20), short stature (p-value = 0.032, OR = 0.44), genitourinary anomalies (p-value = 0.032, OR = 0.63) and ASD (p-value = 0.039, OR = 1.94). The diagnostic rate for CMA in this study was 18%. We present the largest report of CMA data in a cohort with ND in Brazil. We characterize the rare CNVs found together with the main phenotypes presented by each patient, list phenotypes which could predict a higher diagnostic probability by CMA in patients with a neurodevelopmental disorder and show how CMA and classical karyotyping results are complementary.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 55 条
  • [1] Homozygosity mapping in 64 Syrian consanguineous families with non-specific intellectual disability reveals 11 novel loci and high heterogeneity
    Abou Jamra, Rami
    Wohlfart, Sigrun
    Zweier, Markus
    Uebe, Steffen
    Priebe, Lutz
    Ekici, Arif
    Giesebrecht, Susanne
    Abboud, Ahmad
    Al Khateeb, Mohammed Ayman
    Fakher, Mahmoud
    Hamdan, Saber
    Ismael, Amina
    Muhammad, Safia
    Noethen, Markus M.
    Schumacher, Johannes
    Reis, Andre
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2011, 19 (11) : 1161 - 1166
  • [2] Clinical genomics expands the morbid genome of intellectual disability and offers a high diagnostic yield
    Anazi, S.
    Maddirevula, S.
    Faqeih, E.
    Alsedairy, H.
    Alzahrani, F.
    Shamseldin, H. E.
    Patel, N.
    Hashem, M.
    Ibrahim, N.
    Abdulwahab, F.
    Ewida, N.
    Alsaif, H. S.
    Al Sharif, H.
    Alamoudi, W.
    Kentab, A.
    Bashiri, F. A.
    Alnaser, M.
    AlWadei, A. H.
    Alfadhel, M.
    Eyaid, W.
    Hashem, A.
    Al Asmari, A.
    Saleh, M. M.
    AlSaman, A.
    Alhasan, K. A.
    Alsughayir, M.
    Al Shammari, M.
    Mahmoud, A.
    Al-Hassnan, Z. N.
    Al-Husain, M.
    Khalil, R. Osama
    Abd El.Meguid, N.
    Masri, A.
    Ali, R.
    Ben-Omran, T.
    El.Fishway, P.
    Hashish, A.
    Sencicek, A. Ercan
    State, M.
    Alazami, A. M.
    Salih, M. A.
    Altassan, N.
    Arold, S. T.
    Abouelhoda, M.
    Wakil, S. M.
    Monies, D.
    Shaheen, R.
    Alkuraya, F. S.
    [J]. MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 22 (04) : 615 - 624
  • [3] [Anonymous], 2017, DAT G GENECARDS HUM
  • [4] [Anonymous], 2001, International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF)
  • [5] Application of array comparative genomic hybridization in 256 patients with developmental delay or intellectual disability
    Bartnik, Magdalena
    Nowakowska, Beata
    Derwinska, Katarzyna
    Wisniowiecka-Kowalnik, Barbara
    Kedzior, Marta
    Bernaciak, Joanna
    Ziemkiewicz, Kamila
    Gambin, Tomasz
    Sykulski, Maciej
    Bezniakow, Natalia
    Korniszewski, Lech
    Kutkowska-Kazmierczak, Anna
    Klapecki, Jakub
    Szczaluba, Krzysztof
    Shaw, Chad A.
    Mazurczak, Tadeusz
    Gambin, Anna
    Obersztyn, Ewa
    Bocian, Ewa
    Stankiewicz, Pawel
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED GENETICS, 2014, 55 (01) : 125 - 144
  • [6] The de novo chromosome 16 translocations of two patients with abnormal phenotypes (mental retardation and epilepsy) disrupt the A2BP1 gene
    Bhalla, K
    Phillips, HA
    Crawford, J
    McKenzie, OLD
    Mulley, JC
    Eyre, H
    Gardner, AE
    Kremmidiotis, G
    Callen, DF
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2004, 49 (06) : 308 - 311
  • [7] Comparison of chromosome analysis and chromosomal microarray analysis: what is the value of chromosome analysis in today's genomic array era?
    Bi, Weimin
    Borgan, Caroline
    Pursley, Amber N.
    Hixson, Patricia
    Shaw, Chad A.
    Bacino, Carlos A.
    Lalani, Seema R.
    Patel, Ankita
    Stankiewicz, Pawel
    Lupski, James R.
    Beaudet, Arthur L.
    Cheung, Sau Wai
    [J]. GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2013, 15 (06) : 450 - 457
  • [8] Prevalence of Pathogenic Copy Number Variation in Adults With Pediatric-Onset Epilepsy and Intellectual Disability
    Borlot, Felippe
    Regan, Brigid M.
    Bassett, Anne S.
    Stavropoulos, D. James
    Andrade, Danielle M.
    [J]. JAMA NEUROLOGY, 2017, 74 (11) : 1301 - 1311
  • [9] Detection of cryptic pathogenic copy number variations and constitutional loss of heterozygosity using high resolution SNP microarray analysis in 117 patients referred for cytogenetic analysis and impact on clinical practice
    Bruno, D. L.
    Ganesamoorthy, D.
    Schoumans, J.
    Bankier, A.
    Coman, D.
    Delatycki, M.
    Gardner, R. J. M.
    Hunter, M.
    James, P. A.
    Kannu, P.
    McGillivray, G.
    Pachter, N.
    Peters, H.
    Rieubland, C.
    Savarirayan, R.
    Scheffer, I. E.
    Sheffield, L.
    Tan, T.
    White, S. M.
    Yeung, A.
    Bowman, Z.
    Ngo, C.
    Choy, K. W.
    Cacheux, V.
    Wong, L.
    Amor, D. J.
    Slater, H. R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS, 2009, 46 (02) : 123 - 131
  • [10] New insights in the interpretation of array-CGH: autism spectrum disorder and positive family history for intellectual disability predict the detection of pathogenic variants
    Cappuccio, Gerarda
    Vitiello, Francesco
    Casertano, Alberto
    Fontana, Paolo
    Genesio, Rita
    Bruzzese, Dario
    Ginocchio, Virginia Maria
    Mormile, Angela
    Nitsch, Lucio
    Andria, Generoso
    Melis, Daniela
    [J]. ITALIAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 2016, 42