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Prenatal diagnosis of the RSH/Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome

✍ Scribed by Kratz, Lisa E.; Kelley, Richard I.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
34 KB
Volume
82
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299
DOI
10.1002/(sici)1096-8628(19990219)82:5<376::aid-ajmg4>3.0.co;2-b

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✦ Synopsis


The RSH/Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (RSH/SLOS) is a relatively common, autosomal recessive malformation syndrome comprising distinctive facial, limb and genital anomalies, and mental retardation. Most patients with a clinical diagnosis of RSH/SLOS have a defect of cholesterol biosynthesis at the level of 3␀-hydroxysteroid-⌬ 7 -reductase, resulting in a decreased level of cholesterol and an increased level of 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) in body fluids and tissues. We report on our experience with the prenatal diagnosis of RSH/SLOS by quantitative sterol chromatography in amniotic fluid (AF) and chorionic villus (CV). Of 76 AF and nine CV samples analyzed for various indications, 20 were diagnostic of RSH/SLOS based on an increased level of 7DHC in the fluid or tissue. Of 39 fetuses at a 25% risk for RSH/SLOS, 10 (25.6%) were affected. Twenty-nine pregnancies not known to be at risk for RSH/SLOS were studied because of either a fetal abnormality characteristic of RSH/SLOS detected by ultrasound, a low maternal serum uE3 level (MSuE3), or both. None of the pregnancies tested, because of a low MSuE3 but lacking a sonographic abnormality characteristic of RSH/SLOS, was affected. However, three of four pregnancies with a low MSuE3 and an RSH/SLOStype fetal abnormality were positive. RSH/ SLOS was diagnosed in two additional pregnancies on which MSuE3 data were not available but in which fetal anomalies were identified. Of these five RSH/SLOS fetuses identified in pregnancies not otherwise at risk for RSH/SLOS, the presenting sonographic anomaly was either polydactyly, ambiguous genitalia, or both. Evaluation of the biochemical parameters and clinical severity of RSH/SLOS showed that there was an inverse correlation between clinical severity and both the level of AF 7DHC and the level of MSuE3. Based on these earlier and more extensive studies, we conclude that accurate prenatal diagnosis of RSH/ SLOS is possible by sterol analysis of AF and, most likely, CV specimens as well. Furthermore, our findings suggest that MSuE3 levels in combination with sonography may provide useful diagnostic and prognostic information in the absence of a family history of RSH/SLOS. Am. J. Med. Genet. 82:376-381, 1999.


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## To the Editor: The incidence of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS, McKusick 270 400) has been estimated to be approximately 1 in 50,000 to 1 in 20,000 births in North Americans [Kelley, 1997;Lowry and Yong, 1980]. However, the incidence greater than 1 in 10,000 in a completely ascertained newborn