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Recurrence rate for de novo 21q21q translocation Down syndrome: A study of 112 families

✍ Scribed by Steinberg, Charlotte ;Zackai, Elaine H. ;Eunpu, Deborah L. ;Mennuti, Michael T. ;Emanuel, Beverly S. ;Opitz, John M.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1984
Tongue
English
Weight
438 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Recurrence of de novo GqGq Down syndrome (DS) in nine reported families and the low frequency of this chromosome abnormality in the population prompted this multicenter study to examine recurrence rate. Pedigrees and cytogenetic findings were analyzed from 112 families ascertained by a DS child with de novo GqGq translocation. Four of 112 sets of parents had abnormal cytogenetic findings. One mother and two fathers had a low proportion of mosaicism for trisomy 21 in peripheral lymphocytes. In one of these fathers, fibroblast studies confirmed the mosaicism (others not similarly studied). Two of these three families have one additional child each, both being normal. In the fourth family, the mother is heterozygous for a pericentric inversion of chromosome 21.

Ninety of the 112 probands had a total of 130 full sibs and 34 half sibs. None of these 164 sibs was affected; the recurrence rate could still be as high as 2% (with 95% confidence based upon calculation of a one‐tailed confidence interval). Because of the latter, the nine reports of recurrence in the literature, and the abnormal cytogenetic findings in peripheral lymphocytes in 4/112 sets of parents (3.6%), we think that caution should be exercised when counseling that the recurrence risk of this event is remote.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Recurrence Risk in De Novo 21q21q Transl
✍ Hall, Bryan D. ;Opitz, John M. ;Reynolds, James F. πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1985 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 113 KB

## An article by Steinberg et a1 [1984] cautioned against the potential error of counseling families a low-recurrence risk when a previous child has had a de novo 21q21q translocation Down syndrome. They also studied 112 families (ie, sets of parents) with a child with de novo 21q21q translocatio

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We report on an aneuploidy syndrome due to the unbalanced segregation of a familial translocation (4;21)(p16.3;q22.1) causing a partial 4p monosomy and a partial 21q trisomy. The three affected children presented with severe failure to thrive, short stature, microcephaly, profound hypotonia, and men