Further delineation of cardiac abnormalities in Costello syndrome.
Publication/Presentation Date
8-1-2002
Abstract
We review the cardiac abnormalities in 94 patients (27 new, 67 literature) with Costello syndrome, an increasingly recognized syndrome consisting of increased birth weight, postnatal growth retardation, and distinctive facial, skin, and musculoskeletal features (MIM 218040). A cardiac abnormality was found in 59 (63%) patients, with each of three categories occurring in approximately one-third of patients. A cardiovascular malformation (CVM) was noted in 30%, typically pulmonic stenosis (46% of those with a CVM). Cardiac hypertrophy was reported in 34%, which involved the left ventricle in 50% and was usually consistent with classic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). A variety of rhythm disturbances were reported in 33%. Most (74%) were atrial tachycardia that was reported as supraventricular, chaotic, multifocal, or ectopic. Of 31 patients with a rhythm abnormality, 22 (68%) had an additional abnormality, i.e., CVM (4), cardiac hypertrophy (12), or both (6). Nine patients had isolated dysrhythmia, five (56%) of whom died. All of the 12 (13%) patients who died had a cardiac abnormality. One patient died of embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, but in the remainder, a cardiac cause of death could not be disproved. All patients with Costello syndrome need a baseline cardiology evaluation with echocardiography and Holter monitoring. Additional prospective evaluations, even in patients without apparent cardiac abnormalities, would be prudent, although data are insufficient to propose a specific schedule.
Volume
111
Issue
2
First Page
115
Last Page
129
ISSN
0148-7299
Published In/Presented At
Lin, A. E., Grossfeld, P. D., Hamilton, R. M., Smoot, L., Gripp, K. W., Proud, V., Weksberg, R., Wheeler, P., Picker, J., Irons, M., Zackai, E., Marino, B., Scott, C. I., Jr, & Nicholson, L. (2002). Further delineation of cardiac abnormalities in Costello syndrome. American journal of medical genetics, 111(2), 115–129. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.10558
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
12210337
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article