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Phenotype, cancer risk, and surveillance in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome depending on molecular genetic subgroups.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Maas, Saskia M 
Vansenne, Fleur 
Kadouch, Daniel JM 
Ibrahim, Abdulla 
Bliek, Jet 

Abstract

Patients with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) have an increased risk to develop cancer in childhood, especially Wilms tumor and hepatoblastoma. The risk varies depending on the cause of BWS. We obtained clinical and molecular data in our cohort of children with BWS, including tumor occurrences, and correlated phenotype and genotype. We obtained similar data from larger cohorts reported in the literature. Phenotype, genotype and tumor occurrence were available in 229 of our own patients. Minor differences in phenotype existed depending on genotype/epigenotype, similar to earlier studies. By adding patients from the literature, we obtained data on genotype and tumor occurrence of in total 1,971 BWS patients. Tumor risks were highest in the IC1 (H19/IGF2:IG-DMR) hypermethylation subgroup (28%) and pUPD subgroup (16%) and were lower in the KCNQ1OT1:TSS-DMR (IC2) subgroup (2.6%), CDKN1C (6.9%) subgroup, and the group in whom no molecular defect was detectable (6.7%). Wilms tumors (median age 24 months) were frequent in the IC1 (24%) and pUPD (7.9%) subgroups. Hepatoblastoma occurred mostly in the pUPD (3.5%) and IC2 (0.7%) subgroups, never in the IC1 and CDKN1C subgroups, and always before 30 months of age. In the CDKN1C subgroup 2.8% of patients developed neuroblastoma. We conclude tumor risks in BWS differ markedly depending on molecular background. We propose a differentiated surveillance protocol, based on tumor risks in the various molecular subgroups causing BWS. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Description

Keywords

Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome, Wilms tumor, genotype-phenotype correlation, hepatoblastoma, neuroblastoma, Adolescent, Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome, Child, Cohort Studies, DNA Methylation, Female, Genetic Association Studies, Genomic Imprinting, Hepatoblastoma, Humans, Insulin-Like Growth Factor II, Male, Minisatellite Repeats, Neoplasms, Phenotype, Population Surveillance, Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated, RNA, Long Noncoding, Risk, Wilms Tumor, Young Adult

Journal Title

Am J Med Genet A

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1552-4825
1552-4833

Volume Title

170

Publisher

Wiley