Bent Bone Dysplasia-FGFR2 type is a relatively recently described bent
bone phenotype with diagnostic clinical, radiographic, and molecular
characteristics. Here we report on 11 individuals, including the original four
patients plus seven new individuals with three longer-term survivors. The
prenatal phenotype included stillbirth, bending of the femora, and a high
incidence of polyhydramnios, prematurity, and perinatal death in three of 11
patients in the series. The survivors presented with characteristic radiographic
findings that were observed among those with lethality, including bent bones,
distinctive (moustache-shaped) small clavicles, angel-shaped metacarpals and
phalanges, poor mineralization of the calvarium, and craniosynostosis.
Craniofacial abnormalities, hirsutism, hepatic abnormalities, and genitourinary
abnormalities were noted as well. Longer-term survivors all needed ventilator
support. Heterozygosity for mutations in the gene that encodes Fibroblast Growth
Factor Receptor 2 (FGFR2) was identified in the nine
individuals with available DNA. Description of these patients expands the
prenatal and post-natal findings of Bent Bone Dysplasia–FGFR2 type and
adds to the phenotypic spectrum among all FGFR2 disorders.
Serpentine fibula polycystic kidney syndrome (SFPKS; OMIM600330) is a rare skeletal dysplasia with a characteristic phenotype that includes polycystic kidneys, S-shaped fibulas, and abnormal craniofacial features. SFPKS shares features with Alagille (AGS; OMIM) and Hajdu-Cheney (HCS; OMIM10250) syndromes. All three syndromes result from mutations in the gene that encodes NOTCH2, one of the receptors involved in Notch signaling. Notch signaling is a major developmental signaling pathway, as well as a key regulator of numerous cellular processes. In this report, we present the prenatal ultrasound and postnatal findings in a 23-week fetus with severe manifestations of SPKS and heterozygosity for a de novo mutation in exon 34 of NOTCH2. These findings expand the phenotypic spectrum of NOTCH2 mutations and demonstrate the findings in the prenatal period.
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