Shima T, Kinjo T, Park S, Sonoda M. Perinatal clinical course of Vici syndrome associated with novel
EPG5 variants: unique cardiac changes and difficulty with foetal diagnosis.
BMJ Case Rep 2024;
17:e255847. [PMID:
38182173 PMCID:
PMC10773411 DOI:
10.1136/bcr-2023-255847]
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Abstract
Vici syndrome is a genetic disorder involving autophagy dysfunction caused by biallelic pathogenic variants in ectopic P-granules 5 autophagy tethering factor (EPG5). We report the perinatal clinical course of a neonate with Vici syndrome with a unique cardiac presentation. Foetal ultrasonography (US) detected right ventricular hypertrophy, hypoplastic left ventricle and narrowing of the foramen ovale, which were alleviated after birth. Agenesis of the corpus callosum and cerebellar hypoplasia were missed antenatally. After delivery, the patient was clinically diagnosed with Vici syndrome and two novel pathogenic mutations were detected in EPG5 The T-cell receptor repertoire was selectively skewed in the Vβ2 family. Immunological prophylaxis and tube feeding were introduced. Early diagnosis helps parents accept their child's prognosis and decide on a care plan. However, US has limited potential to detect clinical phenotypes associated with Vici syndrome. Foetal MRI may detect the characteristic abnormalities and contribute to antenatal diagnosis.
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