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      Successful Growth Hormone Therapy in Cornelia de Lange Syndrome

      case-report

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          Abstract

          Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a both clinically and genetically heterogeneous syndrome. In its classical form, it is characterised by distinctive facial features, intra-uterine growth retardation, short stature, developmental delay, and anomalies in multiple organ systems. NIPBL, SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21 and HDAC8, all involved in the cohesin pathway, have been identified to cause CdLS. Growth hormone (GH) secretion has been reported as normal, and to our knowledge, there are no reports on the effect of recombinant human GH treatment in CdLS patients. We present a patient born small for gestational age with persistent severe growth retardation [height -3.4 standard deviation score (SDS)] and mild dysmorphic features, who was treated with GH from 4.3 years of age onward and was diagnosed 6 years later with CdLS using whole-exome sequencing. Treatment led to a height gain of 1.6 SDS over 8 years. Treatment was interrupted shortly due to high serum insulin-like growth factor-1 serum values. In conclusion, GH therapy may be effective and safe for short children with CdLS.

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          Tables for predicting adult height from skeletal age: revised for use with the Greulich-Pyle hand standards.

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            Continuous growth reference from 24th week of gestation to 24 months by gender

            Background Growth charts and child growth assessment have become prime global instruments in child health practice over the 30 years. An updated, continuous growth standard that bridges size at birth values with postnatal growth values can improve child growth screening and monitoring. Methods This novel growth chart was constructed from two sources of information. Size at birth (weight, length and head circumference) reference values were updated based on information of normal deliveries (i.e. singleton live births without severe congenital malformation, with healthy mothers and born vaginally) from the Swedish Medical Birth Registry, 1990–1999 (n = 810393). Weight was evaluated using logarithmic transformation as for postnatal weight. Standard deviations were estimated from data within the empirical mean ± 1.0 SD for each gestational week and gender. These values were smoothed by empirical curve-fitting together with values from our recently published postnatal growth reference including 3650 longitudinally followed children from birth to final height [9]. Timescale and weight axes were made logarithmic in order to magnify the early time part of the graph. Results This study presents the first continuous gender specific growth chart from birth irrespective of gestational age at birth until 2 years of age for weight, length and head circumference. Birth weight at 40 weeks of gestation increased approximately 100 gram and length increased only 1 mm compared with earlier Swedish reference from 1977–81. The curve is now less S-shaped as compared with earlier curves and compared with 4 curves from other countries and with more constant variation over the whole range. Conclusion Our values picture the unrestricted pattern of growth improving the detection of a deviating growth pattern, when the growth of an individual infant is plotted on the charts. Especially for very preterm infants age corrected growth can be more easily evaluated although it must be recognized that the early comparison is with what is estimated as normal growth in uterus. The reference values are useful in child health care systems for population screening, but also in research or in the clinic for evaluating various growth promoting interventions – either nutritional, surgical or therapeutic – that might affect a child in early life.
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              Mutations in SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex gene ARID1B cause Coffin-Siris syndrome.

              We identified de novo truncating mutations in ARID1B in three individuals with Coffin-Siris syndrome (CSS) by exome sequencing. Array-based copy-number variation (CNV) analysis in 2,000 individuals with intellectual disability revealed deletions encompassing ARID1B in 3 subjects with phenotypes partially overlapping that of CSS. Taken together with published data, these results indicate that haploinsufficiency of the ARID1B gene, which encodes an epigenetic modifier of chromatin structure, is an important cause of CSS and is potentially a common cause of intellectual disability and speech impairment.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Clin Res Pediatr Endocrinol
                J Clin Res Pediatr Endocrinol
                JCRPE
                Journal of Clinical Research in Pediatric Endocrinology
                Galenos Publishing
                1308-5727
                1308-5735
                December 2017
                15 December 2017
                : 9
                : 4
                : 366-370
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Leiden University Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [2 ] Leiden University Medical Center, Department of Clinical Genetics, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [3 ] Academic Medical Center, Department of Clinical Genetics, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [4 ] Erasmus Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
                Author notes
                * Address for Correspondence: Leiden University Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, Leiden, The Netherlands Phone: +31 71 526 28 24 E-mail: m.de_graaf.kjc@ 123456lumc.nl
                Article
                3031
                10.4274/jcrpe.4349
                5785645
                28588001
                4b3781ee-4e8c-4806-ad02-242620119361
                ©Copyright 2017 by Turkish Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes Society The Journal of Clinical Research in Pediatric Endocrinology published by Galenos Publishing House.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 02 March 2017
                : 29 May 2017
                Categories
                Case Report

                Pediatrics
                cornelia de lange syndrome,growth hormone,small for gestational age,nipbl,whole-exome sequencing

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