Achondroplasia Flashcards
What is the inheritance pattern for achondroplasia?
Autosomal dominant
Usually sporadic
What is the recurrence risk for achondroplasia?
normal parents <1%
Parent with achondroplasia 50%
Two parents with achondroplasia: 50% achondroplasia, 25% unaffected child, 25% homozygous achondroplasia (severe, lethal)
What is the genetic defect in achondroplasia?
Unique single base pair substitution mutation involving fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 gene (FGFR3) at chromosome 4p16.3
What are the associated medical findings with achondroplasia?
- Disproportionate limbs, rhizomelic shortening, “trident” fingers
- Short stature (mean height 49-51in)
- Macrocephaly, frontal bossing, depressed nasal bridge, malar hypoplasia
o 5% may have symptomatic hydrocephalus - Fatal apnea (~10%) especially before age 2yrs
o Misshaped and small foramen magnum
o Vascular and cervicomedullary constriction - OSA is very common
o Obesity, small airway, lymphatic hypertrophy - Chronic hypoxemia can be associated with small thoraces/constricted chest
- Middle ear dysfunction – CHL
- Kyphosis –> resolves in most
- Spinal stenosis is uniformly present
- Knee instability in toddlers, varus deformity (bowlegs)
- Orthodontic problems associated with crowding and overbite
- Anesthesia risks (cervical spinal stenosis, small airway, OSA, restrictive lung
disease)
What are the developmental outcomes for achondroplasia?
- Cognitive development and function is typically normal
o ~10% may have severe learning disabilities, intellectual disability or ASD - Motor development is delayed and atypical due to hypotonia, disproportion, joint hypermobility
a) Sit 9-20months
b) Walk 14-27months - Increased language delays
o Associated with chronic OME and conductive hearing loss - If marked developmental delays or hypotonia –> evaluate for craniocervical
junction compression!
What is the DDx for achondroplasia?
- Other skeletal dysplasias + disproportionate short stature incld:
a) Hypochrondroplasia (milder bone dysplasia, often FGFR3)
b) Thanatophoric dysplasia (severe, usu. lethal, also FGFR3)
c) Pseudoachondroplasia (epiphyseal + metaphyseal dysplasia, COMP gene)
What are the recommendations for achondroplasia?
- Standardized linear growth charts
- Environmental and adaptive modifications
o Driving, reaching, etc - MRI or CT brain and C-spine after diagnosis during neonatal period or early infancy
o Close monitoring of OFC - Sleep study
- Audiology
- Avoid poor infant positioning (<12months)
o NO unsupported sitting, umbrella strollers, swings - Close neurologic monitoring with regular exams