Array-Based Comparative Genomic Hybridization Analysis in Children with Developmental Delay/Intellectual Disability

Author:

Türkyılmaz A1,Geckinli BB2,Tekin E3,Ates EA4,Yarali O5,Cebi AH1,Arman A2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Genetics , Karadeniz Technical University Faculty of Medicine , Trabzon , Turkey

2. Department of Medical Genetics , Marmara University School of Medicine , Istanbul , Turkey

3. Department of Pediatric Neurology , Giresun University Faculty of Medicine , Giresun , Turkey

4. Department of Medical Genetics , Marmara University Pendik Training and Research Hospital , Istanbul , Turkey

5. Clinics of Medical Genetics , Erzurum City Hospital , Erzurum , Turkey

Abstract

Abstract Developmental delay (DD) is a condition wherein developmental milestones and learning skills do not occur at the expected age range for patients under 5 years of age. Intellectual disability (ID) is characterized by limited or insufficient development of mental abilities, including intellectual functioning impairments, such as learning and cause–effect relationships. Isolated and syndromic DD/ID cases show extreme genetic heterogeneity. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization aCGH) can detect copy number variations (CNVs) on the whole genome at higher resolution than conventional cytogenetic methods. The diagnostic yield of aCGH was 15.0–20.0% in DD/ID cases. The aim of this study was to discuss the clinical findings and aCGH analysis results of isolated and syndromic DD/ID cases in the context of genotype-phenotype correlation. The study included 139 cases (77 females, 62 males). Data analysis revealed 38 different CNVs in 35 cases. In this study, 19 cases with pathogenic CNVs (13.6%) and five cases with likely pathogenic CNVs (3.5%) were found in a total of 139 cases diagnosed with DD/ID. When all pathogenic and likely pathogenic cases were evaluated, the diagnosis rate was 17.1%. The use of aCGH analysis as a first-tier test in DD/ID cases contributes significantly to the diagnosis rates and enables the detection of rare microdeletion/microduplication syndromes. The clear determination of genetic etiology contributes to the literature in terms of genotype-phenotype correlation.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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