A Peruvian Child with 18p-/18q+ Syndrome and Persistent Microscopic Hematuria

Author:

Poterico Julio1,Vásquez Flor2,Chávez-Pastor Miguel23,Trubnykova Milana2,Chavesta Félix2,Chirinos Jenny2,Salcedo Nancy2,Mena Rosmery2,Cubas Sulema2,González Rocío2,Alvariño Rossana2,Abarca-Barriga Hugo24

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Neoplásicas, Lima, Perú

2. Department of Genetic & Inborn Error Metabolism, Instituto Nacional de Salud del Niño, Breña, Lima, Perú

3. Faculty of Human Medicine Alberto Hurtado, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Perú

4. Postgraduate Program at Odontopediatrics, Universidad Científica del Sur, Lima, Perú

Abstract

AbstractChromosome 18 pericentric inversion carriers could have offspring with recombinant chromosomes, leading to patients with clinical variable manifestations. Patients with 18p-/18q+ rearrangements share some clinical characteristics, while other characteristics differ. Factors for such divergence include the length of the inverted segment, among others. Here, we describe a Peruvian child with dysmorphic features, intellectual disability persistent microscopic hematuria, aortic pseudocoarctation, and descending aorta arteritis, among others. Karyotype analysis of family members determined the mother as the carrier of a pericentric inversion: 18[inv(18)(p11.2q21.3)]. This child carries a recombinant chromosome 18, with chromosomal microarray analysis detecting two genomic imbalances in patient's chromosome 18: one duplicated region and one deleted segment in the large and the short arms, respectively. Persistent microscopic hematuria has not been reported among 18p-/18q+ phenotypes. Our patient elucidates that other factors play significant and yet unknown roles for not fulfilling the proposed genotype–phenotype correlation associated with hemizygosity in this type of recombinant chromosome 18 or presenting these features as the patient ages.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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