作者
Philip J. Ostrowski,Anna Zachariou,Chey Loveday,Ana Beleza-Meireles,Marta Bertoli,John Dean,Andrew G. L. Douglas,Ian O. Ellis,Alison Foster,John M. Graham,Jennifer Hague,Yvonne Hilhorst-Hofstee,Mariëtte J.V. Hoffer,Diana Johnson,Dragana Josifova,Sarina G. Kant,Usha Kini,Katherine Lachlan,Wayne Lam,Melissa Lees,Sally Ann Lynch,Silvia Maitz,Shane McKee,Kay Metcalfe,Katherine L. Nathanson,Charlotte W. Ockeloen,Michael Parker,Tyler Mark Pierson,Elisa Rahikkala,Pedro A. Sanchez-Lara,Alice Spano,Lionel Van Maldergem,Trevor Cole,Sofia Douzgou,Katrina Tatton-Brown
摘要
CHD8 has been reported as an autism susceptibility/intellectual disability gene but emerging evidence suggests that it additionally causes an overgrowth phenotype. This study reports 27 unrelated patients with pathogenic or likely pathogenic CHD8 variants (25 null variants, two missense variants) and a male:female ratio of 21:6 (3.5:1, p < .01). All patients presented with intellectual disability, with 85% in the mild or moderate range, and 85% had a height and/or head circumference ≥2 standard deviations above the mean, meeting our clinical criteria for overgrowth. Behavioral problems were reported in the majority of patients (78%), with over half (56%) either formally diagnosed with an autistic spectrum disorder or described as having autistic traits. Additional clinical features included neonatal hypotonia (33%), and less frequently seizures, pes planus, scoliosis, fifth finger clinodactyly, umbilical hernia, and glabellar hemangioma (≤15% each). These results suggest that, in addition to its established link with autism and intellectual disability, CHD8 causes an overgrowth phenotype, and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with increased height and/or head circumference in association with intellectual disability.