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MECOM-associated syndrome: a heterogeneous inherited bone marrow failure syndrome with amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia

Authors :
Manuela Germeshausen
Phil Ancliff
Jaime Estrada
Markus Metzler
Eva Ponstingl
Horst Rütschle
Dirk Schwabe
Richard H. Scott
Sule Unal
Angela Wawer
Bernward Zeller
Matthias Ballmaier
Source :
Blood Advances, Vol 2, Iss 6, Pp 586-596 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract: Heterozygous mutations in MECOM (MDS1 and EVI1 complex locus) have been reported to be causative of a rare association of congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia and radioulnar synostosis. Here we report on 12 patients with congenital hypomegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia caused by MECOM mutations (including 10 novel mutations). The mutations affected different functional domains of the EVI1 protein. The spectrum of phenotypes was much broader than initially reported for the first 3 patients; we found familial as well as sporadic cases, and the clinical spectrum ranged from isolated radioulnar synostosis with no or mild hematological involvement to severe bone marrow failure without obvious skeletal abnormality. The clinical picture included radioulnar synostosis, bone marrow failure, clinodactyly, cardiac and renal malformations, B-cell deficiency, and presenile hearing loss. No single clinical manifestation was detected in all patients affected by MECOM mutations. Radioulnar synostosis and B-cell deficiency were observed only in patients with mutations affecting a short region in the C-terminal zinc finger domain of EVI1. We propose the term MECOM-associated syndrome for this heterogeneous hereditary disease and inclusion of MECOM sequencing in the diagnostic workup of congenital bone marrow failure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24739529
Volume :
2
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Blood Advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f259e1832d944828b2e73efeab32612
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2018016501