Partial absence of the sacrum is a rare congenital defect that also occurs as an autosomal-dominant trait, whereas imperforate/ectopic anus is a relatively common malformation, usually observed in multiple congenital anomalies syndromes. We report on a girl born to healthy consanguineous parents (first cousins once removed) with anal imperforation and associated rectovaginal fistula and partial sacral agenesis. Facial dysmorphism included a high forehead, epicanthic folds, downslanting palpebral fissures, hypertelorism and a depressed nasal root. Brain MRI showed a bilateral opercular dysplasia with a unilateral (right) pachygyria; MRI and X-ray imaging of the spine disclosed a tethered cord associated with partial sacral agenesis. She showed a moderate developmental delay. Ophthalmologic examination evidenced bilateral microphthalmos and relative microcornea. Cytogenetic studies in our patient disclosed a pure de novo 6q25.3 → qter deletion. By genotype analysis, we detected in our patient a maternal allele loss encompassing D6S363 and D6S446. Pure distal 6q deletion is a rare anomaly, reported in association with sacral/anorectal malformations (sacral agenesis, anal imperforation/ectopia) and never with cortical dysplasia. Pooling deletion mapping information in patients with pure terminal and interstitial 6q deletion allowed us to define a critical region spanning 0.3 Mb between the markers D6S959 and D6S437 for sacral/ anal malformations. We hypothesize that haploinsufficiency for a gene within the deleted region may impair normal development of caudal structures, possibly acting on the notochordal development.
CITATION STYLE
Titomanlio, L., Giurgea, I., Baumann, C., Elmaleh, M., Sachs, P., Chalard, F., … Verloes, A. (2006). A locus for sacral/anorectal malformations maps to 6q25.3 in a 0.3 Mb interval region. European Journal of Human Genetics, 14(8), 971–974. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201635
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.