1. Academic Validation
  2. Prenatal cortical hyperostosis with COL1A1 gene mutation

Prenatal cortical hyperostosis with COL1A1 gene mutation

  • Am J Med Genet A. 2008 Jul 15;146A(14):1820-4. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.32351.
Agnès Kamoun-Goldrat 1 Jelena Martinovic Julien Saada Pascale Sonigo-Cohen Ferechte Razavi Arnold Munnich Martine Le Merrer
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Paris Descartes University, INSERM U781, Hôpital Necker, Paris, France. agnes.kamoun@yahoo.fr
Abstract

Infantile cortical hyperostosis (Caffey disease) is benign and self-limiting when it presents near or after birth but it is usually lethal when it presents earlier. We present the clinical, ultrasonic, radiographic, and pathologic findings in an instructive case of early onset prenatal cortical hyperostosis. The pregnancy of a 21-year-old woman was medically terminated at 30 weeks of gestation after a diagnosis of severe osteogenesis imperfecta. Prenatal ultrasounds showed short long bones. Postmortem radiographs showed hyperostosis in long bones, ribs and mandible. The affected skeleton showed marked bony sclerosis and ballooning of the diaphyses of the long bones with periosteal sclerosis. A complete autopsy showed characteristic histologic findings of infantile cortical hyperostosis in affected bones. A missense mutation (3040C --> T) in exon 41 the gene encoding the alpha 1 chain of type I collagen was found in fetus pulmonary tissue. Neither the severe form nor the mild form of prenatal cortical hyperostosis were thought to be related to collagen I mutations. Our study indicates that a heterozygous 3040C --> T mutation can also be found in lethal prenatal cortical hyperostosis.

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