作者
Hui Chen,Yong Chen,Huaping Wu,Xiaolu Qiu,Xiongying Yu,Ruiyan Wang,Jianmin Zhong,Jing Peng
摘要
Purpose PHF21A has been associated with intellectual developmental disorder with behavioral abnormalities and craniofacial dysmorphism with or without seizures (IDDBCS). Here, we report a new patient with IDDBCS and review previously reported patients. Methods We reviewed the phenotypic and genetic spectrum of the newly diagnosed patient and previously reported patients with IDDBCS. Results Among 12 patients (11 whose cases were previously reported and the patient whose case we report here), all patients (100%) had intellectual disability (ID) and motor development delay. Three of 8 patients (37.5%) for whom information on cognition was available had severe ID; ID was moderate in two patients (25%) and mild in three patients (37.5%). Seven of the 12 patients (58.33%) had an epileptic phenotype, and the majority (5/7, 71.42%) of affected individuals developed developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). Of the 5 patients with DEE, three developed infantile epileptic spasm syndrome (IESS). The seizures of 2 patients (2/5, 40%) were controlled by antiseizure medications. Overgrowth, ADHD, hypotonia, ASD, and sleep disorders were observed in 100%, 77.78%, 70%, 50%, and 33.33% of patients, respectively. All of the variants (100%) were de novo heterozygous variants. Three of the 12 patients (25%) had the same variant (p.Arg580*). The most common types of variants were frameshift variants (7/12, 58.33%), followed by nonsense variants (4/12, 33.33%) and missense variants (1/12, 8.33%). Genotype–phenotype relationships for IDDBCS were uncertain, as phenotypic variability was observed among patients with the same variant (p.Arg580*). The patient whose case we report here had a novel PHF21A gene variant (p.Gln97fs*20), which caused neurodevelopmental delay, macrocephaly, and IESS. Conclusion The core phenotypes of IDDBCS include neurodevelopmental delay (intellectual disability and impaired motor skills), craniofacial abnormalities, and overgrowth. ADHD, hypotonia, epilepsy, ASD, and sleep disorders are common symptoms of IDDBCS. Notably, DEE is the dominant phenotype of epilepsy, especially IESS. PHF21A may be a candidate gene for DEE. De novo variants are the main mode of inheritance. The most common types of variants are frameshift variants, and the variant p.Arg580* in PHF21A is located at a mutation hot spot.