Publications by authors named "LeHeup B"

Background: Aarskog-Scott syndrome (AAS) is a rare condition with multiple congenital anomalies, caused by hemizygote variants in the gene. Its description was based mostly on old case reports, in whom a molecular diagnosis was not always available, or on small series. The aim of this study was to better delineate the phenotype and the natural history of AAS and to provide clues for the diagnosis and the management of the patients.

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  • Tatton-Brown-Rahman syndrome (TBRS) is a genetic disorder characterized by overgrowth, intellectual disability, and distinct facial features, resulting from mutations in a gene that regulates DNA methylation.* -
  • A study of 24 French patients identified 17 new genetic variants, confirming that 100% showed intellectual disability, 96% had distinctive facial traits, and 87% exhibited overgrowth, alongside novel symptoms like hypertrichosis.* -
  • The findings enhance the understanding of TBRS's clinical presentation, aiding in diagnosis and patient care by clarifying its genetic and phenotypic diversity.*
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Osteogenesis Imperfecta (OI) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of diseases characterized by brittle bones. Though genetic mutations in COL1A1 and COL1A2 account for approximately 85-90% of OI cases, there are now more than twenty genes described, responsible for rare forms of OI. Treatment is based on the use of bisphosphonates and though it is well established that they increase lumbar spine (LS) bone mineral density (BMD), the clinical impact on fracture reduction is still debated.

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The autosomal dominant Okur-Chung neurodevelopmental syndrome (OCNDS: OMIM #617062) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder first described in 2016. Features include developmental delay (DD), intellectual disability (ID), behavioral problems, hypotonia, language deficits, congenital heart abnormalities, and non-specific dysmorphic facial features. OCNDS is caused by heterozygous pathogenic variants in CSNK2A1 (OMIM *115440; NM_177559.

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Objective: Heterozygous variations in microtubule-associated serine/threonine kinase 1 gene (MAST1) were recently described in the mega-corpus-callosum syndrome with cerebellar hypoplasia and cortical malformations (MCCCHCM, MIM 618273), revealing the importance of the MAST genes family in global brain development. To date, patients with MAST1 gene mutations were mostly young children with central nervous system involvement, impaired motor function, speech delay, and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities. Here, we report the clinical presentation of an adult patient with a rare and de novo MAST1 mutation with central hypogonadism that could extend this phenotype.

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Scope: Disruption of the one carbon metabolism during development, i.e., following a gestational vitamin B9 and B12 deficiencies, is involved in birth defects and brain development delay.

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Background: Array-CGH is the first-tier genetic test both in pre- and postnatal developmental disorders worldwide. Variants of uncertain significance (VUS) represent around 10~15% of reported copy number variants (CNVs). Even though VUS reanalysis has become usual in practice, no long-term study regarding CNV reinterpretation has been reported.

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  • Growth hormone (GH) therapy significantly improves height outcomes in children born small for gestational age (SGA), with a study tracking 291 children over 5 years showing that 66.3% achieved normal height standards.
  • Key factors influencing the success of GH treatment included the child's initial height, age at the start of treatment, overall duration of treatment, and absence of chronic diseases.
  • The study found that most adverse events were non-serious, indicating that while GH therapy was generally effective, it didn't present new safety issues.
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Introduction: Congenital hypothyroidism with gland-in-situ (CH-GIS) is usually attributed to mutations in the genes involved in thyroid hormone production. The diagnostic yield of targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) varied widely between studies. We hypothesized that the molecular yield of targeted NGS would depend on the severity of CH.

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  • The study investigates how maternal drug consumption during pregnancy affects 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) levels in newborns, as high levels can lead to false positives in neonatal screening for congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH).
  • Researchers analyzed data from term newborns born at the Maternity Hospital of Nancy between 2002 and 2018, comparing 17-OHP levels and birth outcomes between drug-exposed infants and those born to mothers without drug addiction.
  • Findings showed that drug-exposed newborns had significantly higher 17-OHP levels (9.83 nmol/L) compared to controls (4.90 nmol/L), along with smaller size and lower Ap
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Only few copy number variants at chromosome 19p13.11 have been reported, thus associated clinical information is scarce. Proximal to these copy number losses, we now identified deletions in five unrelated individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders.

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Bi-allelic variants affecting one of the four genes encoding the AP4 subunits are responsible for the "AP4 deficiency syndrome." Core features include hypotonia that progresses to hypertonia and spastic paraplegia, intellectual disability, postnatal microcephaly, epilepsy, and neuroimaging features. Namely, AP4M1 (SPG50) is involved in autosomal recessive spastic paraplegia 50 (MIM#612936).

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Cerebral organoids have emerged as robust models for neurodevelopmental and pathological processes, as well as a powerful discovery platform for less-characterized neurobiological programs. Toward this prospect, we leverage mass-spectrometry-based proteomics to molecularly profile precursor and neuronal compartments of both human-derived organoids and mid-gestation fetal brain tissue to define overlapping programs. Our analysis includes recovery of precursor-enriched transcriptional regulatory proteins not found to be differentially expressed in previous transcriptomic datasets.

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Background: Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a multisystemic disorder characterized by rod-cone dystrophy, truncal obesity, postaxial polydactyly, cognitive impairment, male hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, complex female genitourinary malformations, and renal abnormalities. There is a large clinical and also genetic heterogeneity in BBS. Here, we report a patient with polydactyly, hyperechogenic kidneys increased in size with normal corticomedullary differentiation, anal imperforation, and malformation of genitals with presence of a genital tubercle with ventral urethral meatus associated with two unfused lateral genital swelling and absent urethral folds, in the context of 46, XY karyotype.

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Introduction: Vitamin B deficiency presents various neurological manifestations, such as cognitive dysfunction, mental retardation, or memory impairment. However, the involved molecular mechanisms remain to date unclear. Vitamin B is essential for synthesizing S-adenosyl methionine (SAM), the methyl group donor used for almost all transmethylation reactions.

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  • Complete gene deletion occurs in 5-10% of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) patients, with a significant representation (4%) observed in a large French cohort of 3,479 cases.
  • A comprehensive clinical evaluation revealed that 93% of patients with gene deletion met the NIH criteria for NF1, showing a higher incidence of symptoms like café-au-lait spots, neurofibromas, and learning disabilities.
  • Compared to typical NF1 cases, the -deleted cohort displayed more severe symptoms, including a higher percentage of spinal neurofibromas, dysmorphism, and various systemic abnormalities.
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Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) constitute an ever-growing group of genetic diseases affecting the glycosylation of proteins. CDG individuals usually present with severe multisystem disorders. MAN1B1-CDG is a CDG with nonspecific clinical symptoms such as intellectual deficiency and developmental delay.

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Background: The molecular basis of McCune Albright syndrome (MAS) is a recurrent GNAS Postzygotic gain of function sporadic mutation, resulting in a mosaic disease. Most of girls present precocious puberty, caused by the development of recurrent ovarian cysts with autonomous Hyperestrogenic stimulation. After menarche, the majority of patients with ovarian GNAS mutation have menstrual disturbances and infertility.

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Biallelic loss-of-function variants in the thrombospondin-type laminin G domain and epilepsy-associated repeats (TSPEAR) gene have recently been associated with ectodermal dysplasia and hearing loss. The first reports describing a TSPEAR disease association identified this gene is a cause of nonsyndromic hearing loss, but subsequent reports involving additional affected families have questioned this evidence and suggested a stronger association with ectodermal dysplasia. To clarify genotype-phenotype associations for TSPEAR variants, we characterized 13 individuals with biallelic TSPEAR variants.

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Background: Children with skin disorders usually receive care from a pediatrician, despite their limited training in this discipline. The advice of a dermatologist is frequently requested.

Objectives: To estimate the degree of concordance in the diagnosis, treatment, advice, and recommended follow-up of skin disorders between pediatricians (in private practice or a pediatric emergency department [PED]) and a dermatologist.

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Background: STUB1 has been first associated with autosomal recessive (SCAR16, MIM# 615768) and later with dominant forms of ataxia (SCA48, MIM# 618093). Pathogenic variations in STUB1 are now considered a frequent cause of cerebellar ataxia.

Objective: We aimed to improve the clinical, radiological, and molecular delineation of SCAR16 and SCA48.

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Introduction: Myeloablative conditioning before allogeneic HSCT during childhood exposes to serious long-term complications, especially gonadal dysfunction. Pubertal issues are less described than other post-HSCT sequelae in childhood.

Methods: Pubertal development and biological gonadal parameters were assessed in a retrospective monocentric cohort of prepubertal patients who underwent HSCT after myeloablative conditioning with TBI or busulfan between 1981 and 2017.

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Background And Purpose: Childhood-onset autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7) is a severe disease which leads to premature loss of ambulation and death. Early diagnosis of SCA7 is of major importance for genetic counselling and still relies on specific genetic testing, driven by clinical expertise. However, the precise phenotype and natural history of paediatric SCA7 has not yet been fully described.

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Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are influenced by interacting maternal and environmental risk factors. High-dose folinic acid has shown improvement in verbal communication in ASD children. The EFFET randomized placebo-controlled trial (NCT02551380) aimed to evaluate the efficacy of folinic acid (FOLINORAL®) at a lower dose of 5 mg twice daily.

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Predictive genetic testing (PGT) is offered to asymptomatic relatives at risk of hereditary heart disease, but the impact of result disclosure has been little studied. We evaluated the psychosocial impacts of PGT in hereditary heart disease, using self-report questionnaires (including the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory) in 517 adults, administered three times to the prospective cohort (PCo: = 264) and once to the retrospective cohort (RCo: = 253). The main motivations for undergoing PGT were "to remove doubt" and "for their children".

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