Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome Flashcards
1
Q
What is the mode of inheritance for BWS?
A
15% Familial autosomal dominant
Sporadic mostly
2
Q
What is the genetic defect for BWS?
A
Dysregulation of imprinted genes at chromosome 11p15.5
50% sporadic loss of methylation on maternal chromosome 11p15.5 at imprinting centre 2
20% sporadic parental uniparental disomy involving chromosome 11p15.5
3
Q
What are the associated medical findings with BWS?
A
- Birth:
a) LGA
b) omphalocele or umbilical hernia
c) macroglossia
d) facial nevus flammeus
e) posterior helical pits
f) prominent eyes
g) anterior ear lobe creases - Prenatal morbidity:
a) preterm birth
b) polyhdramnios
c) large placenta and long umbilical cord - Perinatal mortality ~20%
- Hypoglycemia ~30-50%
- hyperinsulinemia with islet cell hyperplasia - Neonatal polycythemia, hypocalcemia, hypercholesterolemia, hypothyroidism
- Cardiomegaly (common):
a) HLH (rare)
b) mild pulm stenosis
c) PFO - Viscromegaly (liver, kidney, spleen)
- nephromegaly and a wide range of other anomalies common - Increased risk for cancer, esp. <8yo (embryonal tumors)
- 7.5 % risk for solid tumor
- 5.9% risk of isolated hemihyperplasia
a) Wilms
b) hepatoblastoma
c) rhabdomyosarcoma
d) adrenocortical carcinoma
e) neuroblastoma - Children with milder phenotype (i.e. macroglossia and umbilical hernia) may develop tumors
a) Renal manifestations: HTN, nephrocalcinosis, medullary sponge kidney, medullary dysplasia, cystic changes
b) cardiomyopathy (rare) - Dental malocclusion with tendency toward maxillary underdevelopment and mandibular prognathism
4
Q
What is idiopathic hemihyperplasia?
A
- Asymmetric overgrowth of one-half of the body:
a) single limb
b) side of face incld. tongue asymmetry
c) visceromegaly - Increased intra-abdominal tumors (kidney, liver, adrenal)
5
Q
What are the developmental outcomes in BWS?
A
- Usually normal
- Abnormal secondary to prolonged hypoglycemia (smaller OFC, lower IQ, poor neurodevelopmental prognosis if hypoglycemic seizures)
- Abnormal if duplication of 11p15
- Articulation maybe poor due to macroglossia and/or asymmetric facial muscles
- Increased incidence of developmental delay (15-20%) in isolated hemihyperplasia (motor problems maybe seen if large discrepancy in extremities)
6
Q
What is the DDx of BWS?
A
- Isolated hemihyperplasia (hemihypertryophy) for which abdominal embryonal
tumor surveillance is also indicated. - Other overgrowth syndromes, especially:
a) Perlman Syndrome (AR) – macrosomia and high risk of Wilms’ tumor.
b) Simpson-Golabi-Behmel Syndrome (X-linked Recessive) – macrosomia
+/- macrocephaly, visceromegaly, renal cystic dysplasia, and increased
risk for Wilms’ tumor. Distinguished by different facial appearance,
frequent polydactyly, cleft lip or cleft palate, cardiac conduction
abnormalities, and developmental disabilities.
7
Q
What are the recommendations for BWS?
A
- TREAT HYPOGLYCEMIA
- Cardiac evaluation
- Cancer screening
a) Serum alphafetoprotein every 6 weeks until age 4
b) Abdominal Ultrasounds every 3 months until age 8 - Sleep Study, ENT consult
a) Partial tongue resection (reduction glossoplasty) sometimes indicated for
obstructive sleep apnea and severe articulation dysfunction associated with
macroglossia - Orthodontics
- Early Intervention for speech delay
- Craniofacial and/or Orthopedic involvement
- Consider need for adaptive equipment, shoe lift, Physical Therapy
8
Q
What are the major clinical manifestations for Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome?
A
- Macrosomia
- Hemihyperplasia
- Macroglossia
- Organomegaly incld. omphalocele
- Ear lobe pits
- Predisposition to develop embryonal tumor (i.e. Wilms, hepatoblastoma)