Clinical and ocular abnormalities in DEGCAGS syndrome-Developmental delay with gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, genitourinary, and skeletal abnormalities.

Moorfields Eye Hospital Abu-Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, UAE. Mohammed Bin Rashed University, Dubai, UAE. Danat Al Emarat Hospital, Abu Dhabi, UAE. Division of Genetics, Birth Defects & Metabolism, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA. Department of Pediatrics, Feinberg School of Medicine of Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA. Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. The Neuro-Ophthalmology Division, The Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

Molecular genetics & genomic medicine. 2024;(1):e2329
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Abstract

PURPOSE To describe clinical and ocular abnormalities in a case of Developmental Delay with Gastrointestinal, Cardiovascular, Genitourinary, and Skeletal Abnormalities (DEGCAGS syndrome). METHODS A clinical report. CASE DESCRIPTION An infant born to a consanguineous Middle Eastern family who was delivered by cesarean section because of in utero growth restriction, premature labor, and breech presentation. Post-partum medical problems included hypotension, generalized hypotonia, bradycardia, apnea requiring resuscitation and positive pressure ventilation, facial dysmorphia, skeletal malformations, and disorders of the gastrointestinal, immune, urinary, respiratory, cardiac, and visual systems. The family reported that a previous child had severe hypotonia at birth and was given the diagnosis of hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy; that child remains on a ventilator in a chronic care facility. Our patient was found to be homozygous for a novel pathogenic missense variant in theZNF699 zinc finger gene on chromosome 19p13 causing a syndrome known as Developmental Delay with Gastrointestinal, Cardiovascular, Genitourinary, and Skeletal Abnormalities (DEGCAGS syndrome). We review this variable syndrome, including abnormalities of the visual system not described previously. CONCLUSIONS We describe the 15th child to be presumably identified with the DEGCAGS syndrome and the first individual with homozygous missense variants in the ZNF699 gene who had complete clinical examination and detailed retinal imaging.

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Publication Type : Case Reports ; Review

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