Author:
Retrouvey Jean-Marc,Taqi Doaa,Tamimi Faleh,Dagdeviren Didem,Glorieux Francis H.,Lee Brendan,Hazboun Renna,Krakow Deborah,Sutton V. Reid,Bober Michael,Esposito Paul,Eyre David R,Gomez Danielle,Harris Gerald,Hart Tracy,Jain Mahim,Krisher Jeffrey,Nagamani Sandesh CS,Orwoll Eric S,Raggio Cathleen L,Rush Eric,Smith Peter,Tosi Laura,Rauch Frank,
Abstract
AbstractOsteogenesis imperfecta (OI) type V is an ultrarare heritable bone disorder caused by the heterozygous c.-14C>T mutation in IFITM5. The dental and craniofacial phenotype has not been described in detail. In the present multicenter study (Brittle Bone Disease Consortium) 14 individuals with OI type V (age 3 to 50 years; 10 females, 4 males) underwent dental and craniofacial assessment. None of the individuals had dentinogenesis imperfecta. Six of the 9 study participants (66%) for whom panoramic radiographs were obtained had at least one missing tooth (range 1 to 9). Class II molar occlusion was present in 8 (57%) of the 14 study participants. The facial profile was retrusive and lower face height was decreased in 8 (57%) individuals. Cephalometry, performed in three study participants, revealed a severely retrusive maxilla and mandible, and poorly angulated incisors in a 14-year old girl, a protrusive maxilla and a retrusive mandible in a 14-year old boy. Cone beam computed tomograpy scans were obtained from two study participants and demonstrated intervertebral disc calcification at the C2-C3 level in one individual. Our study observed that OI type V is associated with missing permanent teeth, especially permanent premolar, but not with dentinogenesis imperfecta. The pattern of craniofacial abnormalities in OI type V thus differs from that in other severe OI types, such as OI type III and IV, and could be described as a bimaxillary retrusive malocclusion with reduced lower face height and multiple missing teeth.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory