4.2 Article

Prenatal diagnosis of a likely pathogenic variant in ZBTB18: Natural evolution of fetal phenotype including the long bones and corpus callosum

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A
Volume 188, Issue 3, Pages 978-983

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.62599

Keywords

1q43-q44 deletion syndrome; corpus callosum abnormalities; intra uterine growth restriction; prenatal diagnosis; ZBTB18

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Pathogenic variants in the ZBTB18 gene have been found for the first time in a fetus, showing features such as intrauterine growth restriction, diminished long bones growth, single umbilical artery, and a short corpus callosum. The challenging diagnosis of this disorder highlights the importance of targeted follow-up and high clinical suspicion throughout pregnancy.
Pathogenic variants in ZBTB18 gene have been described only postnatally with a variable phenotypic spectrum that includes intellectual disability, microcephaly, hypotonia, poor growth, corpus callosum abnormalities, seizures, and dysmorphic facial features. These features overlap with the phenotype of 1q43-q44 deletion syndrome (OMIM #612337). There are several genes within the 1q43-q44 deletion region, and ZBTB18 is of particular interest due to its known involvement in neuronal differentiation and migration. We describe here a fetus presenting with an intrauterine growth restriction, diminished long bones growth, single umbilical artery, and a short corpus callosum. On mid pregnancy ultrasound, all biometric parameters including the corpus callosum were relatively small but still within the normal range. Only a targeted follow-up during the third trimester, including neurosonographic and MRI exams, revealed the full extent of the malformation, leading to amniocentesis and a genetic workup that led to the identification of a de novo likely pathogenic variant in ZBTB18 gene. This is the first description of the evolving phenotype of a ZBTB18-related disorder in a fetus, which emphasizes the challenging diagnosis of subtle findings, that mandates a high level of clinical suspicion and a targeted follow-up throughout pregnancy.

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