Oral Manifestations of Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome: Genotype-Phenotype Correlation Analysis

  1. Machuca, Guillermo
  2. Limeres, Jacobo
  3. Diz, Pedro
  4. Cruz Ruiz-Villandiego, Jose
  5. Diniz-Freitas, Marcio
  6. Serrano, Candela
  7. Blanco-Lago, Raquel
  8. Nevado, Julian
  9. Maura, Isabel
  10. De Nova, Joaquin Manuel
  11. Silvestre-Rangil, Javier
Revista:
Journal of Clinical Medicine

ISSN: 2077-0383

Ano de publicación: 2020

Volume: 9

Número: 11

Páxinas: 3556

Tipo: Artigo

DOI: 10.3390/JCM9113556 GOOGLE SCHOLAR

Outras publicacións en: Journal of Clinical Medicine

Resumo

Background: Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a rare disease caused by deletion in the distal moiety of the short arm of chromosome 4. The objectives of this study were to report the most representative oral findings of WHS, relate them with other clinical characteristics of the disease, and establish possible phenotype-genotype correlation. Methods: The study was conducted at 6 reference centers distributed throughout Spain during 2018–2019. The study group consisted of 31 patients with WHS who underwent a standardized oral examination. Due to behavioral reasons, imaging studies were performed on only 11 of the children 6 years of age or older. All participants had previously undergone a specific medical examination for WHS, during which anatomical, functional, epilepsy-related, and genetic variables were recorded. Results: The most prevalent oral manifestations were delayed tooth eruption (74.1%), bruxism (64.5%), dental agenesis (63.6%), micrognathia (60.0%), oligodontia (45.5%), and downturned corners of the mouth (32.3%). We detected strong correlation between psychomotor delay and oligodontia (p = 0.008; Cramér’s V coefficient, 0.75). The size of the deletion was correlated in a statistically significant manner with the presence of oligodontia (p = 0.009; point-biserial correlation coefficient, 0.75). Conclusion: Certain oral manifestations prevalent in WHS can form part of the syndrome’s phenotypic variability. A number of the characteristics of WHS, such as psychomotor delay and epilepsy, are correlated with oral findings such as oligodontia and bruxism. Although most genotype-phenotype correlations are currently unknown, most of them seem to be associated with larger deletions, suggesting that some oral-facial candidate genes might be outside the critical WHS region, indicating that WHS is a contiguous gene syndrome.

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