Purpose: Most chromosome abnormality patients require long-term clinical care. Awareness of mosaicism and comorbidities can potentially guide such health care. Here we present a population-wide analysis of direct and inverse comorbidities affecting patients with chromosome abnormalities. Methods: We extracted direct and inverse comorbidities for the 11 most prevalent chromosome abnormalities from the Danish National Patient Registry (covering 6.9 million patients hospitalized between 1994 and 2015): trisomy 13, 18, and 21, Klinefelter (47,XXY), triple X, XYY, Turner (45,X), Wolf–Hirschhorn, Cri-du-chat, Angelman, and Fragile X syndromes (FXS). We also performed four sub-analyses for male/female Down syndrome (DS) and FXS and non-mosaic/mosaic DS and Turner syndrome. Results: Our data cover 9,003 patients diagnosed with at least one chromosome abnormality. Each abnormality showed a unique comorbidity signature, but clustering of their profiles underlined common risk profiles for chromosome abnormalities with similar genetic backgrounds. We found that DS had a decreased risk for three inverse cancer comorbidities (lung, breast, and skin) and that male FXS and non-mosaic patients have a much more severe phenotype than female FXS and mosaic patients, respectively. Conclusion: Our study underlines the importance of considering mosaicism, sex, and the associated comorbidity profiles of chromosome abnormalities to guide long-term health care of affected patients.
CITATION STYLE
Jørgensen, I. F., Russo, F., Jensen, A. B., Westergaard, D., Lademann, M., Hu, J. X., … Belling, K. (2019). Comorbidity landscape of the Danish patient population affected by chromosome abnormalities. Genetics in Medicine, 21(11), 2485–2495. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-019-0519-9
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