Publications by authors named "Maud Blanluet"

Article Synopsis
  • * The study analyzed 240 fetuses with antenatal signs of TSC, highlighting the diagnostic significance of detecting cardiac rhabdomyomas (CRs); a diagnosis was confirmed in 50% of cases with a single CR and 80.3% with multiple CRs.
  • * The research emphasizes the importance of early diagnosis for effective family counseling and notes a 2.6% prevalence of parental germinal mosaicism among the tested parents.
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We present the phenotype of an infant with the largest ATN1 CAG expansion reported to date (98 repeats). He presented at 4 months with developmental delay, poor eye contact, acquired microcephaly, failure to thrive. He progressively developed dystonia-parkinsonism with paroxysmal oromandibular and limbs dyskinesia and fatal outcome at 17 months.

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Background: The gene is part of the DNA mismatch repair system, but has never been shown to be involved in Lynch syndrome. A first report of four patients from two families, bearing biallelic germline variants, with a phenotype of attenuated colorectal adenomatous polyposis raised the question of its involvement in hereditary cancer predisposition. The patients' tumours exhibited elevated microsatellite alterations at selected tetranucleotide repeats (EMAST), a hallmark of deficiency.

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Background: Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) are the most common cause of neurocognitive impairment and social inadaptation, affecting 1 birth in 100. Despite the existence of precise diagnostic criteria, the diagnosis remains difficult, often confounded with other genetic syndromes or neurodevelopmental disorders. Since 2016, Reunion Island has been a pilot region for the identification, diagnosis, and care of FASD in France.

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  • Patients with Fanconi anemia (FA) show chromosome instability, leading to exhaustion of hematopoietic stem cells and a higher risk of developing poor-prognosis myeloid leukemia.
  • A study involving 62 patients revealed unique mutations and structural variants that resemble BRCA-related cancers, with many patients showing chromosome 1q gain linked to MDM4 trisomy, which downregulates p53 signaling.
  • MDM4 triplication not only enhances the survival of FA stem cells but also promotes leukemia development, suggesting that targeting MDM4 could be a potential therapeutic strategy to disrupt this pathway.
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Background: Truncating pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants of CDH1 cause hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC), a tumour risk syndrome that predisposes carrier individuals to diffuse gastric and lobular breast cancer. Rare CDH1 missense variants are often classified as variants of unknown significance. We conducted a genotype-phenotype analysis in families carrying rare CDH1 variants, comparing cancer spectrum in carriers of pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants (PV/LPV; analysed jointly) or missense variants of unknown significance, assessing the frequency of families with lobular breast cancer among PV/LPV carrier families, and testing the performance of lobular breast cancer-expanded criteria for CDH1 testing.

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Background: DNA methylation-based classification of cancer provides a comprehensive molecular approach to diagnose tumours. In fact, DNA methylation profiling of human brain tumours already profoundly impacts clinical neuro-oncology. However, current implementation using hybridisation microarrays is time consuming and costly.

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Up to 80% of BRCA1 and BRCA2 genetic variants remain of uncertain clinical significance (VUSs). Only variants classified as pathogenic or likely pathogenic can guide breast and ovarian cancer prevention measures and treatment by PARP inhibitors. We report the first results of the ongoing French national COVAR (cosegregation variant) study, the aim of which is to classify BRCA1/2 VUSs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Balanced translocations can lead to unbalanced chromosomal rearrangements being passed down to children, which often result in inherited chromosomal abnormalities present from conception.
  • In a study, two siblings inherited mosaic chromosomal rearrangements from their father, who had a balanced translocation, leading to similar health issues like intellectual disability and physical deformities.
  • Advanced genetic testing revealed two different cell types in the siblings’ blood, suggesting a postzygotic rescue mechanism caused these abnormal patterns to reoccur in both siblings.
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Fanconi anemia (FA) is the most common inherited bone marrow failure syndrome and presents with cytopenias, characteristic physical features, increased chromosomal breaks, and a higher risk of malignancy. Genetic features of this disease vary among different ethnic groups. We aimed to identify the incidence, outcome, overall condition, and genetic features of patients affected with FA in Lebanon to optimize management, identify the most common genes, describe new mutations, and offer prenatal diagnosis and counseling to the affected families.

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  • Cowden syndrome (CS) is a genetic disorder marked by macrocephaly, skin lesions, and heightened risk of certain cancers, especially breast and thyroid cancers.
  • A 28-year-old woman with CS developed ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) and exhibited related physical symptoms and family cancer history.
  • Genetic testing revealed a pathogenic variant in her tumor, suggesting a link between CS and her OCCC, which prompts reconsideration of the cancer spectrum associated with Cowden syndrome.
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  • A massive parallel sequencing approach has been developed for diagnosing inherited colorectal cancer (CRC) by quickly capturing and analyzing specific genetic sequences in 10 key genes linked to Mendelian CRC.
  • The sequencing was performed using advanced Illumina platforms and involved a comprehensive bioinformatics pipeline for precise mapping, variant calling, and structural variant detection.
  • The analysis of 1644 cases revealed a 20% detection rate of harmful genetic variants, which increased to 37% for Lynch syndrome patients, highlighting the method's effectiveness in identifying complex genetic alterations related to CRC.
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  • Development of certain tumors before age 31 or multiple cancers may indicate germline mutations, which are significant in the context of Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS).
  • This study analyzed 328 patients with germline mutations, finding that 14% of cases involved de novo mutations, with some occurring during embryonic development.
  • The researchers also discovered mosaic mutations in both affected individuals and their unaffected relatives, emphasizing the need for medical labs to effectively identify these mutations during testing.
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Background & Aims: Polymorphisms in the region of the interleukin (IL)28B gene have been associated with pegylated-interferon (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin treatment response mainly in genotype 1 HCV infections. However, there are few data on HCV genotype 4 (HCV-4) infection. We evaluated, in a unique well-characterized cohort of HCV-4 patients, the association of IL28B polymorphism with response to treatment or liver disease severity.

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