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Supplementary Material for: Major Contribution of Genomic Copy Number Variation in Syndromic Congenital Heart Disease: The Use of MLPA as the First Genetic Test
<p>Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common congenital disorder
among live births. When associated with extracardiac abnormalities, it
is characterized as a syndromic heart disease (syndromic CHD) and
corresponds to 25% of all liveborn infants with a heart defect. The
etiology in about 65% of the cases still remains unknown, and in about
35% of the patients, it is associated with genetic factors. In the
present study, MLPA and SNP-array techniques were used to investigate a
group of 47 patients with syndromic CHD. In total, 16 defects (34%) were
identified, of which 12 (25.5%) were classified as pathogenic or
probably pathogenic. The most frequent abnormalities were 22q11.2
deletion (22q11.2 deletion syndrome) and 7q11.23 deletion
(Williams-Beuren syndrome). We also show that rarer malformations may be
associated with syndromic CHD, such as 14q32.33 deletion as well as
17q25.3, 15q11.2 (BP1-BP2), 22q13.31, and 12p13.31 (<i>SLC2A3</i>)
duplications. The present study demonstrates that CNVs are important
causal factors and should be studied in patients with syndromic CHD.
Furthermore, the use of MLPA as a first screening test was appropriate,
as this less expensive technology detected 11 of the 12 pathogenic
abnormalities (91.6%).</p