“…Interstitial deletions of chromosome 1p31 have been reported in at least 10 individuals and phenotypic characteristics summarized by Mircher et al 1 Clinical findings included intellectual disability, hypertonia, failure to thrive, microcephaly, broad nasal tip, tendency for an open mouth, micrognathia, short neck, fifth finger clinodactyly, and tapering fingers. Additional features described more recently included short stature, obesity, facial asymmetry, hypodontia, 2 ventriculomegaly, hypogenesis of the corpus callosum, abnormal external genitalia, 3 prominent supraorbital ridges, pectus excavatum, high-arched palate, 4 strabismus, midline cleft of the upper and lower lip, and autism spectrum disorder 5,6 (►Table 1). Neuropsychiatric or behavioral phenotypes for chromosome 1p31 deletion have been poorly characterized to date beyond autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability.…”