4.6 Article

The Clinical and Genotypic Spectrum of Scoliosis in Multiple Pterygium Syndrome: A Case Series on 12 Children

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12081220

Keywords

CHRNG; distal arthrogryposis type 8; Escobar; multiple pterygium syndrome; MYH3; scoliosis

Funding

  1. Shriners Hospitals for Children [79150]
  2. Direction pour la Recherche et l'Innovation (DRCI) of the Grenoble Alpes University Hospital Center
  3. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [R03HD099516]
  4. Fonds de la Recherche en Sante du Quebec

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Multiple pterygium syndrome (MPS) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by joint contractures and webbing, necessitating molecular diagnosis and careful monitoring of the spine for management. Treatment of scoliosis in MPS patients includes bracing, serial spine casting, and potential non-fusion spinal instrumentation to modulate severe curves.
Background: Multiple pterygium syndrome (MPS) is a genetically heterogeneous rare form of arthrogryposis multiplex congenita characterized by joint contractures and webbing or pterygia, as well as distinctive facial features related to diminished fetal movement. It is divided into prenatally lethal (LMPS, MIM253290) and nonlethal (Escobar variant MPS, MIM 265000) types. Developmental spine deformities are common, may present early and progress rapidly, requiring regular fo llow-up and orthopedic management. Methods: Retrospective chart review and prospective data collection were conducted at three hospital centers. Molecular diagnosis was confirmed with whole exome or whole genome sequencing. Results: This case series describes the clinical features and scoliosis treatment on 12 patients from 11 unrelated families. A molecular diagnosis was confirmed in seven; two with MYH3 variants and five with CHRNG. Scoliosis was present in all but our youngest patient. The remaining 11 patients spanned the spectrum between mild (curve <= 25 degrees) and malignant scoliosis (>= 50 degrees curve before 4 years of age); the two patients with MYH3 mutations presented with malignant scoliosis. Bracing and serial spine casting appear to be beneficial for a few years; non-fusion spinal instrumentation may be needed to modulate more severe curves during growth and spontaneous spine fusions may occur in those cases. Conclusions: Molecular diagnosis and careful monitoring of the spine is needed in children with MPS.

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