Research: Fetal Presentation of MYRF-Related Cardiac Urogenital Syndrome: An Emerging and Challenging Prenatal Diagnosis

Prenat Diagn

. 2024 Nov 14.

 doi: 10.1002/pd.6700. Online ahead of print. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39542847/

Fetal Presentation of MYRF-Related Cardiac Urogenital Syndrome: An Emerging and Challenging Prenatal Diagnosis

Maud Favier 1 2Elise Brischoux-Boucher 1Louise C Pyle 3Nicolas Mottet 4Marion Auber-Lenoir 5Julie Cattin 4Eric Dahlen 6Christelle Cabrol 1Francine Arbez-Gindre 7Tania Attié-Bitach 8 9Odile Boute 10Louise Devisme 10Detlef Trost 11Aicha Boughalem 11David Chitayat 12Lev Prasov 13 14Odelia Chorin 15Annick Rein-Rothschild 15 16Eran Kassif 16 17Tal Weissbach 16 17Laura Godfrey Hendon 18Margaret P Adam 19Chloé Quelin 2 20Sylvie Jaillard 21Laura Mary 21Sietse M Aukema 22Malou Heijligers 23Christine de Die-Smulders 23Sander Stegmann 23Lauren Badalato 24Adi Ben-Yehuda 25Claire Beneteau 2 26Pierre-Louis Forey 27Paul Kuentz 6 28Juliette Piard 1 28

Affiliations Expand

Abstract

Purpose: MYRF-related cardiac-urogenital syndrome (MYRF-CUGS) is a rare condition associated with heterozygous MYRF variants. The description of MYRF-CUGS phenotype is mostly based on postnatal cases and 36 affected individuals have been published so far. We aim now to delineate the prenatal phenotype of MYRF-CUGS by reporting clinical data from fetuses and neonates with a pathogenic MYRF variant.

Methods: Detailed radiographic, pathological, clinical, and molecular data from 12 prenatal cases were collected through an international collaborative study. Adding the five fetuses previously published, we were able to study a cohort of 17 cases.

Results: Main ultrasound-accessible manifestations of MYRF-CUGS include congenital heart defects (13/17, 76%), congenital diaphragmatic hernia (10/17, 59%) and disorders of sexual differentiation in 46, XY fetuses (7/14; 50%). Postnatal examination and/or autopsy data highlighted additional birth defects and neurological findings with a large spectrum of severity. Molecular results revealed ten previously unpublished variants, one missense and nine predicted truncating variants (three frameshift, three nonsense and three splice site variants).

Conclusion: We report the first prenatal cohort of MYRF-CUGS, allowing us to further characterize the variable expressivity of this rare disorder in fetuses. Severe congenital anomalies with a poor prognosis are more frequent than previously described in postnatal cases. Our data suggest that MYRF-CUGS is characterized by a recurrent recognizable malformative association, accessible to prenatal diagnosis, with a significant intrafamilial phenotypic variability making genetic counseling challenging.

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