DOI: 10.1369/jhc.4B6388.2005 Volume 53 (3): 365-366, 2005 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc.
Dup(13)(q14.2-q14.3) : Yet Another New Differential Diagnostic Aspect for Short Staturelike Phenotype
Institute of Human Genetics and Anthropology, Jena, Germany (IS,AN,VB,AH,UC,TL), and Ambulance of Gynecology, Weimar, Germany (K-HE) Correspondence to: Dr. Thomas Liehr, Institut für Humangenetik und Anthroplogie, Kollegiengasse 10, D-07743 Jena, Germany. E-mail: i8lith{at}mti.uni-jena.de
We report on the case of a pregnant woman with hyposomia who was previously suspected of having Turner syndrome. Prenatal cytogenetic diagnostics showed a fetal karyotype of 46,XX,dup(13)(q14.2q21.1) ish.13q14(RB1 x 3). Parental and grandparental chromosome analyses were performed and the dup(13) was found to be of maternal origin (de novo). The pregnancy was continued and a healthy female child was born with normal development apart from growth retardation. The reported chromosomal aberration is, together with two other cases reported in the literature, the first hint of a short staturelike phenotype due to dup(13)(q14.2q14.3). (J Histochem Cytochem 53:365366, 2005)
Key Words: prenatal diagnosis FISH multicolor banding short stature chromosomal duplication
SHORT STATURE is a clinical symptom associated with many types of hereditary disorders and chromosomal rearrangements (for overview see, e.g., OMIM-database http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db = OMIM). At present, short stature is described in >560 syndromes, mainly as a symptom of complex diseases. Short stature is an almost universal feature of Turner syndrome, with patients having a mean adult height of up to 20 cm less than that of the general female population (Parvin et al. 2004
We report on a case of a young, healthy pregnant women (CII) with hyposomia. CII was 23 years old and it was her first pregnancy. Short stature was remarkable in CII, with an adult height of only 146 cm. Her shortness was exceptional throughout her entire lifetime (Figure 1). Even though no other symptoms and no menstrual irregularities were observed, at the age of 8 years, CII was suspected of having Turner syndrome, because chromosome analysis revealed a very mild mosaic karyotype 46,XX/45,X (72/2). The young woman requested genetic counseling for a potential recurrence risk for her unborn child (CI) having a Turner syndrome. A normal fetal development was found at sonographic examination in 10 + 5 and 20 + 1 gestational weeks. In week 16 + 1, amniocentesis was performed and prenatal banding cytogenetics showed for CI a karyotype of 46,XX,dup(13)(q14q21); even a trisomy 13 was suspected after the prenatal rapid test (reported in Liehr et al. 2002a
A polyhydramnion was detected by ultrasound in weeks 27 + 5 and 30 + 0, and a growth arrest must have occurred after the last sonographic examination in CI. At week 40 of gestation, the female child was born by cesarean section with Apgar scores of 6/8/9, a weight of 2750 g, and a length of 44 cm. Although the body mass index was within the normal range, the birth length fell below the third percentile. Postnatal examinations revealed a healthy girl with normal development apart from short stature and very mild dysmorphic signs (low-set ears, sandal gaps, mongoloid palpebral axis, long eyelashes). At the age of 6 months, the girl weighed 7220 g and her body height was 64.5 cm (>15th percentile). Motor and social development were 4 weeks accelerated. As an adult, the mother (CII) did not show any of the aforementioned mild dysmorphic signs present in CI, apart from hyposomia.
To the best of our knowledge, no patients with the identical chromosomal aberration, a dup(13)(q14.2-q21.1), are described in the literature. However, cases suited to pinpoint the critical region for short stature on chromosome 13 were reported previously. Duplications of the chromosomal region 13q13-13q14 were described as compatible with a normal (Rivera et al. 1981 In summary, this report presents another new differential diagnostic aspect for the short staturelike phenotype and underlines the importance of analyzing chromosomes in ambiguous cases.
Supported in part by the EU (ICA2-CT-2000-10012).
Received for publication May 14, 2004; accepted June 7, 2004
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