A novel RYR1 variant in an infant with a unique fetal presentation of central core disease

Author:

Baker Elizabeth K.12ORCID,Al Gharaibeh Faris N.23ORCID,Bove Kevin4,Calvo‐Garcia Maria A.5,Shillington Amelle12,VandenHeuvel Katherine4,Cortezzo DonnaMaria E.2367ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Human Genetics Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati Ohio United States

2. Department of Pediatrics University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Cincinnati Ohio United States

3. Division of Neonatology Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medicine Cincinnati Ohio United States

4. Division of Pathology Cincinnati Children's Hospital Cincinnati Ohio United States

5. Radiology Department University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Cincinnati Ohio United States

6. Department of Anesthesia University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Cincinnati Ohio United States

7. Division of Pain and Palliative Medicine Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medicine Cincinnati Ohio United States

Abstract

AbstractRyanodine receptor type 1‐related disorder (RYR1‐RD) is the most common subgroup of congenital myopathies with a wide phenotypic spectrum ranging from mild hypotonia to lethal fetal akinesia. Genetic testing for myopathies is imperative as the diagnosis informs counseling regarding prognosis and recurrence risk, treatment options, monitoring, and clinical management. However, diagnostic challenges exist as current options are limited to clinical suspicion prompting testing including: single gene sequencing or familial variant testing, multi‐gene panels, exome, genome sequencing, and invasive testing including muscle biopsy. The timing of diagnosis is of great importance due to the association of RYR1‐RD with malignant hyperthermia (MH). MH is a hypermetabolic crisis that occurs secondary to excessive calcium release in muscles, leading to systemic effects that can progress to shock and death if unrecognized. Given the association of MH with pathogenic variants in RYR1, a diagnosis of RYR1‐RD necessitates an awareness of medical team to avoid potentially triggering agents. We describe a case of a unique fetal presentation with bilateral diaphragmatic eventrations who had respiratory failure, dysmorphic facial features, and profound global hypotonia in the neonatal period. The diagnosis was made at several months of age, had direct implications on her clinical care related to anticipated need to long‐term ventilator support, and ultimately death secondary an arrhythmia as a result of suspected MH. Our report reinforces the importance of having high suspicion for a genetic syndrome and pursuing early, rapid exome or genome sequencing as first line testing in critically ill neonatal intensive care unit patients and further evaluating the pathogenicity of a variant of uncertain significance in the setting of a myopathic phenotype.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Fetal Akinesia Deformation Sequence;Smith's Recognizable Patterns of Human Deformation;2025

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