The initial size of a defect within the oval fossa at diagnosis is the best predictor of its natural history. Some defects increase in size with growth, irrespective of their initial size.
Background
- Childhood-onset cardiomyopathy (CMP) is a heterogenous group of conditions the etiology of which is largely unknown. The influence of consanguinity on the genetics of CMP has not been addressed at a large scale.
Methods
- To unravel the genetic etiology of childhood-onset CMP in a consanguineous population a categorized approach was adopted. Cases with childhood-onset CMP were consecutively recruited. Based on the likelihood of founder mutation and on the clinical diagnosis, genetic test was categorized to either: (i) Targeted Genetic Test (TGT) with: targeted mutation test, single gene test, or multi-gene panel for Noonan syndrome, or (ii) Untargeted genetic test with whole exome sequencing (WES) or whole genome sequencing (WGS). Several bioinformatics tools were used to filter the variants.
Results
- 205 unrelated probands with various forms of CMP were evaluated. The median age of presentation was 10 months. In 30.2% (n=62), TGT had a yield of 82.7% compared to 33.6% for WES/WGS (n=143) giving an overall yield of 53.7%. Strikingly, 96.4% of the variants were homozygous, 9% of which were found in 4 dominant genes. Homozygous variants were also detected in 7 novel candidates (
ACACB
,
AASDH
,
CASZ1
,
FLII
,
RHBDF1
,
RPL3L
,
ULK1
).
Conclusions
- Our work demonstrates the impact of consanguinity on the genetics of childhood-onset CMP, the value of adopting a categorized population-sensitive genetic approach, and the opportunity of uncovering novel genes. Our data suggest that if a founder mutation is not suspected, adopting WES/WGS as a first-line test should be considered.
We report a case of Uhl's anomaly in a 5-month-old cyanotic infant who presented with thromboembolic stroke and acute hemiparesis. The patient underwent successfully an initial surgical repair, which included exclusion of the right ventricle by patch closure of the tricuspid valve, atrial septectomy and construction of a bidirectional Glenn shunt. This was followed by successful construction of a total cavopulmonary connection.
We present a case of tetralogy of Fallot associated with Scimitar syndrome. The patient was an 11-month old female who underwent successfully total repair of her lesion, including rerouting of the anomalous pulmonary vein to the left atrium. The diagnosis was suspected from the chest x-ray and echocardiography, and confirmed by angiography. To the best of our knowledge only 2 additional cases have previously been reported.
Percutaneous balloon valvuloplasty was successfully performed in a 13‐month‐old symptomatic infant with congenital tricuspid and pulmonic valve stenosis. Both valves were dilated in the same setting, resulting in a significant hemodynamic and clinical improvement.
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