ESPE Abstracts (2022) 95 P2-31

ESPE2022 Poster Category 2 Bone, Growth Plate and Mineral Metabolism (21 abstracts)

Short Stature and Single Central Incisor of The Upper Maxillar: Pathogenic Variant in The SHH Gene

Jesus Dominguez-Riscart 1,2 , Paola Arellano-Ruiz 3 , Ana Garcia-Zarzuela 1,2 , Silvia Modamio-Høybjør 4,5 & Alfonso M Lechuga-Sancho 1,2,6


1Pediatric Endocrinology unit, Pediatric department, Puerta del Mar University Hospital, Cadiz, Spain; 2Biomedical Research and Innovation Institute of Cadiz (INIBiCA), Cadiz, Spain; 3Genetic department. Puerta del Mar University Hospital, Cadiz, Spain; 4Institute of Medical and Molecular Genetics (INGEMM), IdiPAZ and Hospital Universitario La Paz, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain; 5Skeletal Dysplasia Multidisciplinary Unit (UMDE) and ERN-BOND, Hospital Universitario La Paz, Madrid, Spain; 6Mother and Child Health, and Radiology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Cádiz University, Cadiz, Spain


Introduction: The Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) gene is involved in the development of midline structures. Pathogenic variantd in this gene have been associated to holoprosencenphaly 3; Microphthalmia with coloboma 5; Schizencephaly; and Single median maxillary central incisor syndrome (SMMCIS). All of them are inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern and exhibit incomplete penetrance as well as variable expressivity.

Case Report: A 6-year-old girl in follow-up in our clinics for postnatal short stature and congenital microcephaly. Neonatal anthropometry was normal (weight -1.81 SD, length -1.5 SD) except for the presence of microcephaly (HC -2.56 SD). At birth, she required admission to neonatology due to generalized cyanosis coinciding with infancy, a CT scan of the paranasal sinuses was performed and anterior mucosal thickening of the nostrils was diagnosed. In addition, he has required follow-up in Nephrology due to unilateral pyeloureteral stenosis, in Cardiology due to interventricular communication and in Neurology due to ADHD. Physical examination revealed a weight -2.26 SD, height -2.17 SD, WC -5.89 SD, sitting height -0.77 SD and normal fathom, as well as a single upper central incisor (Image 1) and a deviation of the nasal septum without other dysmorphic features. On the other hand, the mother presents a similar phenotype without single central incisor but a height of -3.13 SD. It was requested a karyotype and cerebral MRI, without anormal findings. We performed a skeletal dysplasias panel using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS). A pathogenic variant in the SHH gene (NM_000193.3:c.449C>T; p.(Thr150Met)) was found. It is not previously described in the literature. Segregation study has been requested from the parents and sister.

Discussion: Phenotypic spectrum of SHH gene include the presence of holoprosencephaly, microcephaly (33%), facial dysmorphisms (midfacial hypoplasia, hypotelorism, flat nasal root, cleft lip/palate and a single upper central incisor), congenital obstruction of the nasal airway (90%), hypopituitarism (15%), short stature and intellectual disability (50%). It also has being associated cardiac or genitourinary malformations with less frequency.

Conclusions: The non-pathological brain imaging and the presence of single upper central incisor, short stature, microcephaly, alterations of the nasal airway, cardiac malformations and genitourinary malformations makes SMMCI the most plausible diagnosis.

Volume 95

60th Annual ESPE (ESPE 2022)

Rome, Italy
15 Sep 2022 - 17 Sep 2022

European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology 

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