Spectrum of clinical features associated with interstitial chromosome 22q11 deletions: a European collaborative study.

A K Ryan(Newcastle University), Judith A. Goodship(Newcastle University), David I. Wilson(Newcastle University), N. Philip(Newcastle University), A. Lévy(Newcastle University), H. Seidel(Newcastle University), Simone Schuffenhauer(Newcastle University), H Oechsler(Newcastle University), B. H. Belohradsky(Newcastle University), M Prieur(Newcastle University), Alain Aurias(Newcastle University), F. Lucy Raymond(Newcastle University), Jill Clayton‐Smith(Newcastle University), Eli Hatchwell(Newcastle University), C McKeown(Newcastle University), F. A. Beemer(Newcastle University), Bruno Dallapiccola(Newcastle University), Giuseppe Novelli(Newcastle University), J A Hurst(Newcastle University), Jaakko Ignatius(Newcastle University), Andrew Green(Newcastle University), R M Winter(Newcastle University), L A Brueton(Newcastle University), Karen Brøndum‐Nielsen(Newcastle University), Peter Scambler(Newcastle University)
Journal of Medical Genetics
October 1, 1997
Cited by 1,195Open Access
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Abstract

We present clinical data on 558 patients with deletions within the DiGeorge syndrome critical region of chromosome 22q11. Twenty-eight percent of the cases where parents had been tested had inherited deletions, with a marked excess of maternally inherited deletions (maternal 61, paternal 18). Eight percent of the patients had died, over half of these within a month of birth and the majority within 6 months. All but one of the deaths were the result of congenital heart disease. Clinically significant immunological problems were very uncommon. Nine percent of patients had cleft palate and 32% had velopharyngeal insufficiency, 60% of patients were hypocalcaemic, 75% of patients had cardiac problems, and 36% of patients who had abdominal ultrasound had a renal abnormality. Sixty-two percent of surviving patients were developmentally normal or had only mild learning problems. The majority of patients were constitutionally small, with 36% of patients below the 3rd centile for either height or weight parameters.


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