Prenatal diagnosis of a de novo partial trisomy 6q and partial monosomy 18p associated with cephalocele: A case report
Article Category: Case Report
Published Online: Aug 26, 2020
Page range: 99 - 102
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/bjmg-2020-0014
Keywords
© 2020 Karaman A, Karaman B, Çetinkaya A, Karaman S, Demirci O, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
Partial trisomy of distal 6q is a very rare event with only a few cases described in the current literature [1]. It was first reported in 1963 as a distinct phenotype [1]. Common phenotypic features among children with 6q25-q27 partial trisomy include cranial anomalies, facial dysmorphism, anterior webbing of the neck, cardiac anomalies, joint contractures, and profound psychomotor retardation [2,3].
On the other hand, a partial or complete 18p deletion is more common [4]. It was first reported in 1963 characterized as a distinct syndrome presenting with developmental delay, facial dysmorphism, short stature, and mental retardation [1,5]. Movement disorders including dystonia, myoclonus, ataxia, and tic disorder have been reported in individuals with the 18p deletion syndrome [6, 7, 8]. Here, we report parietal cephalocele in a fetus with the combined chromosomal anomaly: duplication of 6q25.3-q27 and deletion of 18p11.32-p11.31.
Figure 1
Parietal cephalocele of the affacted individual.

During her pregnancy, she was referred to the genetics department, and amniocentesis was performed for karyo-typing at 18 weeks’ gestation. Chromosome analysis showed an extra substance on 18p. In order to elucidate the origin of the extra genetic material, array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) was performed. Briefly, fetal DNA was extracted from the cultured amniotic fluid sample using the Puregene Genomic DNA Purification Kit (Qiagen Inc., Valencia, CA, USA), and studied by wholegenome aCGH using a custom 135K feature platform (designed by Signature Genetics Laboratories, Spokane, WA, USA; manufactured by Roche NimbleGen, Madison, WI, USA). The aCGH revealed ~12 Mb gain in 6q25.3-q27 region and ~8 Mb loss within 18pll.32-pll.31 [Figure 2(A) and 2(B)]. Fluorescence
Figure 2
The aCGH showing the loss of 18p11.32-p11.31 (A) and gain of 6q25-27 (B) resulting from the

Unbalanced chromosomal translocations are among the many rearrangements encountered in the prenatal genetic diagnosis. During gametogenesis, human chromosomes occasionally acquire
The cooccurrence of multiple
This mutator phenotype appears to be driven by an unknown factor that is activated in primary oocytes and subsequently lost or silenced in zygotes before the 4- or 8-cell stage. Notably, one of the five cases (mCNV7) carried CNVs only on the paternally derived chromosomes, raising the possibility of etiological heterogeneity among mdn CNVs [14].
Partial chromosomal deletions and duplications, collectively CNVs, are a major contribution to the genome variability among individuals [15, 16, 17] and can either be pathogenic or without clinical consequences. A particular class, the microdeletions and microduplications, which alter <5 Mb, have been extensively associated with developmental delay and intellectual disability. There is a continuous spectrum of phenotypic effects of CNVs, from adaptive traits, to underlying cause of disease, to embryonic lethality [18].
Here, the clinical findings and genetic studies performed to elucidate such a
The 18p deletion syndrome has an incidence of about 1:50,000 live births, with more than 150 cases reported to date [20,21]. Although approximately 66.0-89.0% of the cases occur as direct
The case presented here does not completely overlap with defined features of either duplication of distal 6q or 18p deletion syndrome, but parietal cephalocele is a midline cranial defect similar to HPE. About 10.0-15.0% of individuals with 18p deletion have HPE [21]. However, deletion of the
In prenatal diagnosis, the less expensive conventional karyotyping is the most commonly used test in Turkey. On the other hand, more recently-developed microarray analysis can detect chromosomal imbalances overcoming the limitations of resolution and banding quality that are inherent in conventional karyotype analysis, while not showing how genomic loci are involved [24, 25, 26]. Here, the combination of both conventional karyotyping and aCGH suggested an unbalanced translocation and FISH testing confirmed the structural variant, also creating an opportunity for easy screening of the parents for this particular structural variant. Thus, in the age of microarray, we highlight the importance of offering several modalities of genetic tests to patients for delivering a more complete prenatal genetic diagnosis. In conclusion, this study identifies a rare