AI Article Synopsis

  • Conradi-Hünermann-Happle syndrome (CDPX2) is a rare X-linked dominant skeletal disorder predominantly affecting females, with severe cases being extremely rare and usually lethal in males.
  • A study focused on 9 female fetuses with EBP mutations revealed key ultrasound findings such as bone abnormalities and irregular spinal structure, with a mean diagnosis age of 22 weeks in gestation.
  • The results emphasize that prenatal detection of specific skeletal abnormalities can indicate the possibility of CDPX2, as most cases arise from new mutations rather than inherited ones.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Conradi-Hünermann-Happle [X-linked dominant chondrodysplasia punctata 2 (CDPX2)] syndrome is a rare X-linked dominant skeletal dysplasia usually lethal in men while affected women show wide clinical heterogeneity. Different EBP mutations have been reported. Severe female cases have rarely been reported, with only six antenatal presentations.

Methods: To better characterize the phenotype in female fetuses, we included nine antenatally diagnosed cases of women with EBP mutations. All cases were de novo except for two fetuses with an affected mother and one case of germinal mosaicism.

Results: The mean age at diagnosis was 22 weeks of gestation. The ultrasound features mainly included bone abnormalities: shortening (8/9 cases) and bowing of the long bones (5/9), punctuate epiphysis (7/9) and an irregular aspect of the spine (5/9). Postnatal X-rays and examination showed ichthyosis (8/9) and epiphyseal stippling (9/9), with frequent asymmetric short and bowed long bones. The X-inactivation pattern of the familial case revealed skewed X-inactivation in the mildly symptomatic mother and random X-inactivation in the severe fetal case. Differently affected skin samples of the same fetus revealed different patterns of X-inactivation.

Conclusion: Prenatal detection of asymmetric shortening and bowing of the long bones and cartilage stippling should raise the possibility of CPDX2 in female fetuses, especially because the majority of such cases involve de novo mutations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pd.4591DOI Listing

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