Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, BC Children's Hospital Research Institute, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Pediatr Neurol. 2019 Nov;100:87-91. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2019.04.002. Epub 2019 Apr 11.
Intellectual disability (ID) results from a heterogeneous group of disorders and affects 1% to 2% of children. ID frequently occurs in association with other clinical features such as seizures or malformations. We suspected that strabismus might also be unusually frequent in this population and that it might be associated with ID groups affecting motor control.
We reviewed phenotypic descriptors, extracted from medical records, for a heterogeneous series of 222 probands with ID who had been enrolled in a study of clinical application of exome sequencing. We estimated the frequency of strabismus and other common clinical features and explored statistical associations between them. Data from Population Data British Columbia and Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man were also examined for confirmation of our observations.
Strabismus had a higher prevalence among probands with ID than in the general population (odds ratio = 5.46). Moreover, probands with both ID and strabismus were more likely to have problems affecting motor control than those with ID and no strabismus (odds ratio = 2.84). Hypotonia was one of the most common motor control subgroups affecting the ID probands, and a frequent co-occurrence of strabismus and hypotonia was also observed (odds ratio = 2.51) and supported by related gene literature review. There was no evidence for associations between strabismus and other frequent clinical features.
Strabismus is a frequent feature in individuals with ID. The frequent co-occurrence of strabismus and motor control phenotypes, in particular hypotonia, suggests that a common cerebellar mechanism or pathway may underlie these phenotypes.
智力障碍(ID)源于一组异质性疾病,影响 1%至 2%的儿童。ID 常与其他临床特征如癫痫或畸形相关。我们怀疑斜视在该人群中也可能异常常见,并且可能与影响运动控制的 ID 群体相关。
我们回顾了 222 名 ID 先证者的表型描述,这些先证者均来自一项外显子组测序临床应用研究。我们估计了斜视和其他常见临床特征的频率,并探索了它们之间的统计学关联。还检查了不列颠哥伦比亚省人群数据和在线孟德尔遗传数据库的数据,以确认我们的观察结果。
ID 先证者中斜视的患病率高于普通人群(优势比=5.46)。此外,患有 ID 和斜视的先证者比患有 ID 但无斜视的先证者更有可能出现影响运动控制的问题(优势比=2.84)。张力减退是影响 ID 先证者的最常见运动控制亚组之一,并且还观察到斜视和张力减退的频繁共现(优势比=2.51),并得到相关基因文献综述的支持。斜视与其他常见临床特征之间没有证据表明存在关联。
斜视是 ID 个体的常见特征。斜视和运动控制表型,特别是张力减退的频繁共现,表明小脑机制或途径可能是这些表型的基础。