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A Multicenter Analysis of Abnormal Chromosomal Microarray Findings in Congenital Heart Disease.
Landis, Benjamin J; Helvaty, Lindsey R; Geddes, Gabrielle C; Lin, Jiuann-Huey Ivy; Yatsenko, Svetlana A; Lo, Cecilia W; Border, William L; Wechsler, Stephanie Burns; Murali, Chaya N; Azamian, Mahshid S; Lalani, Seema R; Hinton, Robert B; Garg, Vidu; McBride, Kim L; Hodge, Jennelle C; Ware, Stephanie M.
Affiliation
  • Landis BJ; Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN.
  • Helvaty LR; Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN.
  • Geddes GC; Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN.
  • Lin JI; University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh PA.
  • Yatsenko SA; University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh PA.
  • Lo CW; University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh PA.
  • Border WL; Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta GA.
  • Wechsler SB; Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta GA.
  • Murali CN; Baylor College of Medicine Houston TX.
  • Azamian MS; Texas Children's Hospital Houston TX.
  • Lalani SR; Baylor College of Medicine Houston TX.
  • Hinton RB; Texas Children's Hospital Houston TX.
  • Garg V; Baylor College of Medicine Houston TX.
  • McBride KL; Texas Children's Hospital Houston TX.
  • Hodge JC; Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati OH.
  • Ware SM; Nationwide Children's Hospital The Ohio State University Columbus OH.
J Am Heart Assoc ; 12(18): e029340, 2023 09 19.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37681527
ABSTRACT
Background Chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) provides an opportunity to understand genetic causes of congenital heart disease (CHD). The methods for describing cardiac phenotypes in patients with CMA abnormalities have been inconsistent, which may complicate clinical interpretation of abnormal testing results and hinder a more complete understanding of genotype-phenotype relationships. Methods and Results Patients with CHD and abnormal clinical CMA were accrued from 9 pediatric cardiac centers. Highly detailed cardiac phenotypes were systematically classified and analyzed for their association with CMA abnormality. Hierarchical classification of each patient into 1 CHD category facilitated broad analyses. Inclusive classification allowing multiple CHD types per patient provided sensitive descriptions. In 1363 registry patients, 28% had genomic disorders with well-recognized CHD association, 67% had clinically reported copy number variants (CNVs) with rare or no prior CHD association, and 5% had regions of homozygosity without CNV. Hierarchical classification identified expected CHD categories in genomic disorders, as well as uncharacteristic CHDs. Inclusive phenotyping provided sensitive descriptions of patients with multiple CHD types, which occurred commonly. Among CNVs with rare or no prior CHD association, submicroscopic CNVs were enriched for more complex types of CHD compared with large CNVs. The submicroscopic CNVs that contained a curated CHD gene were enriched for left ventricular obstruction or septal defects, whereas CNVs containing a single gene were enriched for conotruncal defects. Neuronal-related pathways were over-represented in single-gene CNVs, including top candidate causative genes NRXN3, ADCY2, and HCN1. Conclusions Intensive cardiac phenotyping in multisite registry data identifies genotype-phenotype associations in CHD patients with abnormal CMA.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Heart Defects, Congenital Type of study: Clinical_trials / Diagnostic_studies / Prognostic_studies Limits: Child / Humans Language: En Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Year: 2023 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Heart Defects, Congenital Type of study: Clinical_trials / Diagnostic_studies / Prognostic_studies Limits: Child / Humans Language: En Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Year: 2023 Type: Article