COL2A1-related skeletal dysplasias with predominant metaphyseal involvement.

Publication/Presentation Date

1-15-2007

Abstract

Skeletal dysplasias induced by mutations in the collagen 2 gene (the so-called "type 2 collagenopathies") form a wide spectrum in severity and are distinguished by subtle clinical and radiographic differential signs. The unifying features are predominant involvement of the vertebral bodies and the epiphyses of the long bones ("spondylo-epiphyseal" pattern). A mild degree of metaphyseal dysplasia can be seen in the so-called Strudwick variant of spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia and is generally mild or absent in other forms. We report here on four individuals with COL2A1 mutations associated with marked metaphyseal involvement with only mild epiphyseal and spondylar changes. One patient who carried a Gly283Arg substitution had a pattern of metaphyseal dysplasia that corresponded precisely to what was termed "Murdoch type metaphyseal dysplasia" in 1960s and was renamed Strudwick type SEMD in 1980s; the second patient carried a Gly181Arg substitution and had severe metaphyseal dysplasia with fractures at the metaphyses reminiscent of the "corner fractures" or Sutcliffe type spondylometaphyseal dysplasia. The third patient also had major metaphyseal involvement but more epiphyseal changes than the others in this study and had a Gly922Arg mutation in COL2A1. The final patient had a small in-frame deletion and unusually ballooned and distorted metaphyses. While it remains true that most individuals with COL2A1 mutations have chondrodysplasia with a spondylo-epiphyseal pattern, metaphyseal involvement is not incompatible with a COL2A1 dysplasia and mutation analysis can be indicated. The observation of these individuals with metaphyseal dysplasia indicates that the phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in type 2 collagen, the main cartilage protein, is even wider than hitherto assumed.

Volume

143A

Issue

2

First Page

161

Last Page

167

ISSN

1552-4825

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

17163530

Department(s)

Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Document Type

Article

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