Title: Genetics for Nurses in Adult Disciplines
1Genetics for Nurses in Adult Disciplines
- A guide to recognition and referral of congenital
and genetic disorders - AUTHORS
- Golder N. Wilson MD PhD,1 Vijay Tonk PhD,2
- REVIEWERS
- Shirley Karr BSN RN,3 Joanna K. Spahis BSN CNS,4
Shirley Myers,5 RNC, MSN, FNP, and Sherry
Letalian RN6 -
- 1Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, Texas Tech
University Health Science Center at Lubbock and
Private Practitioner, KinderGenome Genetics,
Dallas Texas 2Professor of Pediatrics and
Obstetrics-Gynecology Director, Cytogenetics
Laboratory, Texas Tech University Health Science
Center at Lubbock3Genetics Coordinator,
Maternal-Fetal Medicine and Genetics, Texas Tech
University Health Sciences Center at
Amarillo4Pediatric Clinical Nurse Specialist in
Genetics and Coordinator of the Down Syndrome
Clinic, Department of Genetics, Childrens
Medical Center of Dallas5Womens Health Nurse
Practitioner, Maternal-Fetal Medicine and
Genetics, Texas Tech University Health Sciences
Center at Amarillo6Pediatric Clinic Coordinator,
Department of Pediatrics, Texas Tech University
Health Sciences Center, Lubbock - Acknowledgement
- This presentation was designed as part of the
GEN-ARM (Genetics Education Network for Nursing
Assessment, Recognition, and Management) for the
Mountain States Region Genetics Collaborative
(MSRGCC) contact www.mostgene.org or Ms. Joyce
Hooker at joycehooker_at_mostgene.org
2Genetic Disorders are Common
Genetic diseases affect 5-10 of children Nurses
can recognize and refer genetic disorders without
need for esoteric genetic knowledge We will now
present cases where your nursing skills and
alertness (REYDARRecognize, EYDentify, Assess,
Refer) can greatly benefit children with genetic
diseases. These cases will introduce you to
simple principles of genetics that will give you
confidence in recognizing these patients and
foster a medical home These cases and
principles are geared to the nursing genetics
primer and resources on the GENARM CD
3Think genetics when something is unusual or
extreme
- Case A A term AGA newborn product of a pregnancy
with little prenatal care has an enlarged and
distorted head, blue-gray sclerae (whites of the
eyes), and deformed limbs. X-rays show multiple
fractures, and the mother blames this on an auto
accident at 7 months gestation. Do you agree?
Newborn with large head and deformed bones with
fractures by x-ray
4This unusual presentation should prompt REYDAR
for a genetic disease
- More detailed family history would be useful,
although many genetic disorders occur as new
changes (new mutations) - The symptoms of blue sclerae and multiple
fractures could be searched on the website Online
Mendelian Inheritance in Man (go to
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/ or enter OMIM
in search engine). They point to a disorder
called osteogenesis imperfecta (166210 - OMIM contains gt6000 diseases that can be searched
by symptom, name, or number associated databases
contain genetic education, medical literature
(PubMed), and even the complete human genome
sequence/gene map. - Also useful is the companion database
www.genetests.org that lists testing (when
available) for the particular genetic disease (go
to the clinical laboratory section and search by
disease name
5Suspicion of genetic disease underlying this
unusual infant led to referral and genetic
counseling for this autosomal dominant
diseasemothers guilt about her accident was
assuaged and she learned she had a 50 chance
each of her future children would have OI
The family history indicated that the mother and
other relatives had mild features of osteogenesis
imperfecta or brittle bone disease (see Chapter 2)
Family history
Pedigree
6- Case example 1 Nurses in adult disciplines might
have identified the mother or maternal relatives
with OI, giving them the advantages of genetic
counseling for a 50 recurrence risk and
potential therapy with pamidronate that can
decrease the risk for fractures
7Think genetics when something is unusual or
extreme
- Case example 2 A school physical
- A 14-year-old male is seen for a routine school
physical and asks clearance to participate in
sports. His mother mentions he has had surgery
for fused sutures (craniosynostosis) including
reconstruction of his nasal bridge. He has also
had a history of mild mental disability, and the
school nurse notices long fingers and a concave
chest, prompting recall about Marfan syndrome and
heart disease. The nurse decides to postpone
approval for sports participation and refers the
young man for genetic evaluation. Do you agree?
8- In case example 2, the recollection of Marfan
syndrome (154700) was appropriate because of the
boys long spider fingers (arachnodactyly).
Echocardiographic studies would show a dilated
aorta and he should certainly not participate in
collision or high-intensity sports. Genetics
referral would establish that this child had a
disorder called Shprintzen-Goldberg syndrome
(118212) that was similar to Marfan but different
in having craniosynostosis and mental disability.
Shprintzen-Goldberg syndrome is also autosomal
dominant, meaning that the boys normal parents
would have a minimal recurrence risk for future
affected children and the boy himself would have
a 50 chance to transmit the condition with each
future pregnancy. Preventive management in his
case allowed protection from harmful activities
and access to medications such as propranolal or
Losartan that may be helpful in treating aortic
aneurysms.
9- Case example 2 Recognition of a genetic
condition and preventive management for this
teenager allowed protection from harmful
activities and access to medications such as
propranolal or Losartan that may be helpful in
treating aortic aneurysms. A family with Marfan
syndrome is discussed in chapter 2, showing the
advantages of recognizing this disease with its
risks for heart and eye complications.
10- Note that simple recognition and assessment of
possible genetic disease, not sophisticated
knowledge, optimized nursing care of for the
example families. - Nurses with additional interest in genetics can
learn to construct pedigrees, interpret
inheritance mechanisms, and provide recurrence
risks for the parents (genetic counseling) - Nurses are ideally positioned to be genetic
counselors with their hands-on contact, emphasis
on education, and focus on prevention - Read chapters 2-4 in the primer to acquire the
skills for genetic counseling
11Genetic disease can be defined by abnormal genes,
tissues, or chromosomes (genetic testing)
Categories of genetic disease relate to the steps
from gene to family (genetic hierarchy)
- A family has people with unusual symptoms
- A person has abnormal form or function (disease)
- A tissue (cell to organ) has abnormal structure
(metabolic disorders) - A chromosome is extra or missing (chromosome
disorders) - Several genes (plus environment) are abnormal
(multifactorial disorders or susceptibilities) - A gene (DNA to RNA to protein) is abnormal
(Mendelian disorders
12Categories of genetic or congenital disease
13- Mendelian diseases like osteogenesis imperfecta
have distinctive family patterns - The pattern of affected relatives is caused by
transmission of single genes, each with a unique
position (locus) on the chromosome. - The paired chromosomes 1-22 and XX in females
imply paired genes except for X and Y genes in
the male - Dominant or recessive diseases result when one or
both gene partners (alleles) are abnormal. - Abnormal alleles can be predicted (genetic risks)
and sometimes diagnosed through their abnormal
DNA sequence or RNA/protein expression.
14- Sickle cell anemia is recessive, requiring both
ß-globin alleles to be abnormal (SS versus AS
trait or AA normal). - Sickle cell anemia can be predicted (25 risk for
next child) and tested (abnormal S protein or
gene) - Other inherited anemias can be related to
different abnormal globin alleles (C, D, E,
thassemias).
A or S
15- OI is caused by one abnormal allele at a collagen
gene (genotype Oo) - Different phenotypes of OI relate to different
collagen alleles - The gt6000 Mendelian diseases thus relate to a
similar number of different genes and abnormal
alleles. - Characterization of abnormal alleles provides DNA
testingfew of the gt1600 characterized disease
genes are available to the clinic. - Simultaneous analysis of multiple genes (DNA
chips, arrays) is not yet practical in the way
that karyotypes define any abnormal chromosomes
16Know categories, not rare diseases
- Mendelian diseases reflect transmission of single
genes (abnormal alleles) DNA diagnosis
- Single genes altering development cause birth
defects and syndromes - Single genes altering enzyme pathways cause
inborn errors of metabolism - Single genes altering organ function(s) produce
extreme or earlyonset - examples of common disease (e.g.,
neonatal diabetes)
Multifactorial diseases reflect multiple abnormal
genes plus environment DNA/HLA markers
Many genes altering development cause isolated
birth defects like cleft palate Many genes
altering enzyme pathways cause common metabolic
diseases (e.g., adult-onset
diabetes, hyperlipidemia) Many genes altering
organ function(s) produce adult diseases (e.g.,
schizophrenia)
Chromosomal diseases imbalance multiple genes
and cause multiple birth defects Karyotype
17REYDAR of common adult presentations
Recognition ? Category ? Referral ? Medical home
- Case 10PDiabetic woman who becomes pregnant
- Case 11PA pregnant couple and cystic fibrosis
screening - Case 12PA pregnant couple with infertility and
two miscarriages - Case 13PCouple with maternal history of mental
retardation - (see Chapter 1)
18Case 10P. Diabetic woman who is 10 weeks pregnant
- A 25-year-old woman with juvenile diabetes has
been managed by her family practitioner for
several years. She calls and asks for referral to
obstetrics because she is approximately 6 weeks
pregnant. She has had several hospitalizations
for diabetic control and states that her blood
sugars have been high for the past few weeks. The
obstetric nurse discusses the risks of
hypoglycemia, respiratory distress, and
polycythemia for infants of poorly controlled
diabetic mothers, but does not mention another
risk for the fetus, which is?
19- Women with poorly controlled diabetes have a 3-5
fold increased risk for congenital anomalies in
their fetus that can be remembered by
3Cscranial, cardiac, and caudal anomalies.
Cranial defects can include anencephaly as in
case 9P or holoprosencephaly (photo at right)
caudal defects underdevelopment of the
sacrum/lower limbs (caudal regression) or spina
bifida. Anomaly patterns like the VATER
association (192350) or Goldenhar syndrome
(164210) also occur at higher frequency in
infants of diabetic mothers.
20Preconception counsel
- Stringent diabetic control in later pregnancy can
eliminate neonatal physiologic changes like
hypoglycemia, hypocalcemia, polycythemia, and
respiratory problems. Lowering the risks of
diabetic pregnancy illustrates the potential
collaboration of pediatric or adult and obstetric
nurses in preconception counsel. Nurses in adult
disciplines can recognize women or couples with
increased pregnancy risks and refer them for
pregnancy planning.
21Case 14P Man whose father had heart attack at
age 41 (hypercholesterolemia) A nurse
practitioner in a family practice clinic performs
a routine physical on a man of 35 for insurance
purposes. He notes on his preassessment form
mention of the mans father who died of a heart
attack at age 41. He completes a more detailed
family history indicating that the man has two
older brothers and two younger sisters, and that
one of the older brothers has had two heart
attacks and bypass surgery at age 45. The mans
father was adopted, and his mother is in good
health with no heart disease in her family. What
concerns should be raised?
22- Case 14P Discussion
- Besides revealing patterns of disease suggestive
of Mendelian inheritance, a family history can
reveal susceptibilities or risk factors that lead
to screening preventive strategies. Common
disorders like isolated birth defects, coronary
artery disease, diabetes mellitus, or
hypertension follow a model of multifactorial
determination. This model implies the interaction
of multiple genes with the environment and a
threshold above which susceptibility becomes
disease. A growing number of laboratory tests are
being devised to measure individual gene effects
that combine with other genetic and environmental
factors to produce disease. Coronary artery
disease follows the multifactorial model and is
associated with several genetic and environmental
risk factorsblood lipid or homocystine levels,
obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and certain
clotting factors.
23- Case 14P Discussion
- A family member with extreme or unusual
presentation of a common disease (e.g., young age
or multivessel obstruction in coronary artery
disease) indicates increased susceptibility to
that disease (lower threshold) that may be
transmitted to offspring. The mans father with
an early onset coronary gives him a higher risk
(3-5) to develop coronary artery disease and
justifies laboratory testing for the disease
(e.g. stress test for early coronary occlusion)
or factors (e.g., blood pressure, blood
sugar-cholesterol-lipoprotein-homocysteine-clottin
g factor abnormalities) that predispose to
disease.
24- Case 14P Discussion
- Abnormal laboratory findings can lead to medical
(statins, heparin) or dietary (low cholesterol,
folic acid) therapies and improved outcome when
the hereditary risks are recognized. Among the
several genes interacting to cause multifactorial
diseases may be occasional ones of major
effectsuch was the case for the low-density
lipoprotein receptor where mutations caused very
high cholesterol in the dominant condition
familial hypercholesterolemia ( 144010). Extreme
or unusual presentations of common diseases may
also point to Mendelian disorders as well as to
predisposing risk factors. The Surgeon General
has recommended that all individuals know their
family histories, an obligation that nurses of
all disciplines can greatly assist.
25Review of genetic testing
- Mendelian disordersDNA tests for specific mutant
alleles. LIMITATION Only a few diseases are
sufficiently common that DNA testing is
commercially feasible - Chromosome disordersroutine karyotypes on blood,
amniocytes, bone marrow or solid tumors FISH
testing for subtle changes. LIMITATION
Chromosome testing cannot analyze component genes - Multifactorial disordersDNA tests for associated
DNA variants (DNA markers) that indicate
susceptibility to disease. LIMITATION DNA
marker testing is still in the research stage
26- Single gene (Mendelian disorders) that are
sufficiently common can be diagnosed by DNA
testing for changes in gene sequence or
structure the man with family history of heart
attacks (case 14) could have blood cholesterol
studies and DNA testing for mutations in the LDL
receptor
Diagram of gene and its encoded LDL receptor
protein that imports cholesterol into cellsthe
position of mutation (shown below gene) determine
the severity of hypercholesterolemia
27- Chromosome disorders can be diagnosed by a
routine karyotype, performed on cells from
individuals (blood) or fetuses (blood by
fetoscopy, dividing villus cells from chorionic
villus sampling, amniotic fibroblasts from
amniotic fluid). This testing requires at least
5-7 days for results.
28- Now a rapid FISH test is available that does not
require stimulation of cell division and gives
results within 2-4 hours. Rapid FISH highlights
chromosomes commonly involved in disorderse.g.,
13 (Patau syndrome), 18 (Edwards syndrome), or 21
(Down syndrome), showing three versus the normal
two FISH signals in each cell nucleus (X and Y
probes also show Turner syndrome or document sex
in cases of ambiguous genitalia)
29Chromosome disorders
- Miscarriages (50-60), liveborn children (0.5),
cancer tissue (many have diagnostic
changes)--over 200 chromosomal diseases due to
extra or missing chromosome or parts of
chromosomes (p small or q long arms) - Hallmarks are multiple major or minor anomalies
(unusual appearance) with mental disability - Most recognized by a routine karyotype, but FISH
is required to detect submicroscopic deletions
(e.g., DiGeorge) or the 3 of suspect children
who have changes on subtelomere FISH after normal
karyotypes - Individual submicroscopic deletions are found in
Williams (7q), hereditary retinoblastoma (13q),
Prader-Willi (15q), Shprintzen-DiGeorge spectrum
(22q), and 15 others. - Consider chromosomes in any child with
unexplained mental disability and/or multiple
birth defects, couples with gt2 miscarriages,
prenatal diagnosis for women over age 35 - Prenatal diagnosis of chromosome disorders can be
performed by preimplantation diagnosis (first
week), chorionic villus sampling (10-12 weeks),
or amniocentesis (15-18 weeks). - See Chapter 7 for more information
30Multifactorial Disorders
Table 4.1. Multifactorial Disorders in the
United States
Ranks first for neonatal causes of death
approximate scale (100 of predisposition
due to genetic factors as for Mendelian
disorders) to (20 of predisposition due to
genetic factors)
31Multifactorial Disorders
- Most isolated birth defects like cleft palate,
hypospadias, heart defects, spina bifida - Many common diseases like diabetes mellitus,
hypertension, mental illness, mild
mental/learning disabilities - Multiple genes involved, giving lower
transmission risks (about 3 for offspring of
affected parent, sibling to affected child) - Therapeutic goals are to manipulate environment
(e.g., folic acid) either generally or for
specific high-risk individuals identified by
associated DNA markers (more diverse and
sensitive than HLA haplotypes
32Multifactorial disorders For some (e.g.,
coronary artery disease), single genes of major
effect (e.g., those regulating cholesterol) are
good risk markers)
Recognizing at-risk children or adolescent
females provides important opportunities for
nursing education and prevention (see chapter 4)
33- Case 14P Discussion
- A major initiative of modern genetics is to
expand recognition of disease susceptibilities by
examining variable regions of DNA. The human
genome project revealed a difference in DNA
sequence for unrelated individuals every 1 in 200
to 500 nucleotides, implying at least a million
DNA differences per person. Most of these are
single base pair differences that do not lead to
clinical differencessingle nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs). DNA markers that travel
with disorders like schizophrenia (OMIM 181500)
or Alzheimer disease (OMIM 104300, others)
potentially allow measurement of individual
susceptibility in the way that cholesterol
conveys risk for coronary artery disease. With
further study, DNA markers may provide tests for
susceptibility and even prevention through
modified expression of their associated genes.
34- Case 15P Woman whose mother and grandmother had
breast cancer at young ages. - An obstetric nurse assesses a woman aged 37 who
is about 6 weeks along in her current pregnancy.
The woman has two prior children and has no
chronic illnesses her husband is age 40 with a
benign family history. The nurse ascertains that
the woman has two sisters, aged 35 and 32, each
with two children and no health problems. The
womans mother is a breast cancer survivor,
having her first cancer at age 31. Her mothers
mother also had early breast cancer at age 36,
dying by age 45. Her mother has two sisters, one
of whom died from ovarian cancer at age 47 and
another who has had cautery for cancer in situ of
the cervix. What information should the nurse
provide to this couple?
35- Case 15P Discussion
- Besides recognition of advanced maternal age
with discussion of increased risks for chromosome
abnormalities, the nurse should address increased
susceptibility to breast and ovarian cancer.
Although not necessarily pertinent to the current
pregnancy, the woman has increased risks for
breast cancer and should know about options for
breast cancer gene testing. Mutations in the
breast cancer genes BRCA1 (OMIM 113705) and
BRCA2 (OMIM 600185) account for about 10 of
breast cancer, characterized by its early onset
and association with ovarian cancer. Testing
would ideally be performed on one of the womans
affected relatives, ascertaining the presence of
BRCA mutations versus usually multifactorial
breast cancer. If positive, the woman should be
informed about her 50 risk to transmit the
mutation to each child.
36- Case 15P Discussion
- Cancers are additional examples of multifactorial
disorders like coronary artery disease that were
discussed in the previous section. Most will
confer low risks for family members unless the
same cancer is present in multiple relatives or a
given cancer has an unusual or extreme
presentation (e.g., early onset, associated
features). Single gene diseases can also be
concealed amidst multifactorial cancers,
exemplified by the BRCA genes or cancer syndromes
like Li-Fraumeni (bone, breast, brain
cancersOMIM 151623) or Gardner disease (colon
cancer-- OMIM 175100) that are due to single
gene mutations. Alertness for early onset or
recurrent types of cancers in families allows
evaluation for a growing number of cancer genes
or susceptibility markers.
37Rules from Chapter 1
- RULE Recognition of family histories with
multiple affected individuals or those with
unusual/extreme presentations of common diseases
(e.g., heart attacks) allows definition of risk
factors (e.g., cholesterol) and preventive
management.
38. Case 13P Couple with maternal history of
mental retardation Bob and June present to a
nurse practitioner for prenatal care at an
estimated 6 weeks of pregnancy. Bob is 26, June
24, and they had a normal daughter Karen two
years ago with no pregnancy or delivery problems.
Both are healthy and of Caucasian ancestry, and
Bobs family history is normal The nurse finds
that June is an only child, but that her mother
Gail has two brothers who have mental
retardation. In addition, Gail has a sister Joan
with with two boys and a girl, and one boy Eric
has mental retardation thought due to birth
injury. Gails other sister Jill has three boys
and two girls, and her eldest son Jim has mental
retardation of unknown cause. One of Jills
daughters has also had learning problems that
caused her to drop out of high school, and she
has a preschool son Bert with speech delay. What
concerns should the nurse address?
39- Case 13P Discussion
- Besides the usual options for genetic and fetal
screening (ultrasound, quad screen, cystic
fibrosis screening), the nurse should recognize
the positive family history and recommend genetic
evaluation. The presence of several relatives
with the same condition (mental disability)
brings up the possibility of Mendelian disease,
and sketching of the family pedigree (below)
would suggest an X-linked disorder associated
with mental retardation. Genetic evaluation would
inform June that her mother Gail has a 50 chance
and she a 25 chance to be a carrier for the
X-linked disease.
40- Case 13P Discussion
- The X-linked fragile X syndrome (OMIM 300624) is
the most common genetic cause of mental
disability with an estimated incidence of 1 in
2000 males. Since June is early in her pregnancy,
a fragile X DNA test could be performed on one of
her male relatives to confirm or exclude this
diagnosis. It would be ideal if one of her
affected male relatives could be evaluated by a
clinical geneticist so that the diagnosis of
fragile X syndrome or another of the gt20
syndromes associated with X-linked mental
disability could be suspected.
41- If the diagnosis of fragile X were confirmed in a
male relative, June could have fragile X DNA
testing to determine if she was a carrier. If her
relatives were not available, or if their
evaluation could not be accomplished in a time
frame to accomplish Junes testing and options
for prenatal diagnosis, then June could have the
fragile X DNA test but realize that a negative
result would not exclude other X-linked mental
retardation syndromes. Preconception knowledge of
fragile X syndrome in her family with recognition
of her carrier status would have allowed Jill and
Bob to consider other options such as surrogate
egg donor or in vitro fertilization with
preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and
implantation of an unaffected embryo. Their case
emphasizes the value of recognizing suspect
family histories as early as possible in order to
provide genetic counseling and reproductive
options.
42Common disorders (like mild mental or learning
disabilities often exhibit multifactorial
determination
- Case 13P Discussion
- If Jill or Bob had only one relative with mental
disability with no obvious pedigree pattern, then
multifactorial determination of the mental
disability would be most likely. The odds of
multifactorial disability would be increased if
the affected person was mild and did not have an
unusual appearance or biochemical abnormalities.
Multifactorial disorders confer a 2-3 risk for
primary relativesi.e., siblings/parents/children.
Since Jill and Bob had normal intellect, their
risks from one relative with mental disability
would be less than 2-3.
43Review Questions
- 11. A woman is diagnosed with Crohns disease,
and wishes to know the risk that her daughter
will develop the disease. She is otherwise
normal with an unremarkable family history. The
likely inheritance mechanism and her daughters
risk would be - Autosomal dominant with a 50 risk
- Autosomal recessive with a 25 risk
- X-linked recessive with a 25 risk
- Chromosomal with a 10-15 risk
- Multifactorial determination with a 5-7 risk
44- 12. A 24-year-old Ashkenazi Jewish woman develops
bilateral breast cancer. Her mother and
grandmother died of ovarian cancer, and a
maternal aunt also had early onset breast cancer.
She has two daughters aged 12 and 16. The most
probable mechanism and risk to her daughters
would be - Multifactorial determination with a 1-2 risk
- Autosomal dominant with a 50 risk
- Autosomal dominant with a 25 risk
- X-linked dominant with a 50 risk
- X-linked dominant with a 25 risk
45- 13. A male teenager presents for a school
physical with tall stature, thin body build,
concave chest (pectus), long fingers, flat feet,
and increased joint laxity. His father died at
age 35 with a heart attack. He wants approval to
play basketball. An important disease category
and disorder to consider would be - Coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction
- Coronary artery disease and congestive heart
failure - Connective tissue disease and aortic dilatation
- Connective tissue disease and myocardial
infarction - Connective tissue disease and aortic coarctation
46- 14. A 30-year-old man has hypertension
controlled by diet and medication, and one of his
three siblings is affected. His father died of
kidney failure, and one of the mans three sons
had urinary tract infections with cystic kidneys
on ultrasound. The most likely diagnosis is - Multifactorial predisposition to renal failure
- Isolated congenital anomaly of the urinary tract
- Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease
- Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease
- X-linked recessive polycystic kidney disease
47Answer 1E
- 1. Crohns disease is a multifactorial disorder
with a 7.5 risk for siblings of affected
individuals to develop the disease (see Chapters
4 and 12). Approximately the same risk would
apply to other primary relatives such as the
womans daughter.
48Answer 12B
- 12. The early onset and family history of cancer
is suggestive of Mendelian disease (e.g.,
BRCA113705--or Li-Fraumeni syndrome112480--gene
mutations, see chapter 12). The daughters would
be at 50 risk for breast cancer, and DNA testing
on the mother could determine if a particular
BRCA1, BRCA2, or p53 (Li-Fraumeni) tumor
suppressor gene were present. BRCA mutations are
more common in Ashkenazi Jews. The BRCA genes
account for about 10 of breast cancer, the rest
being multifactorial. Thus, negative DNA tests do
not eliminate the need for annual screening.
Testing of the minor daughters would raise the
ethical issues of informed consent and autonomy
(parent versus child), but would probably be
pursued because of the advantages of early
screening or prophylactic mastectomy.
49Answer 13C
- 13. The physical findings are characteristic of
diseases with loose connective tissue, and the
father-son affliction most suggestive of
autosomal dominant diseases like Marfan syndrome
(154700). These individuals are at risk for
aortic dissection and sudden death and should not
participate in collision or high intensity
sports. Note that the history of heart attack
in the father was probably an aortic dissection,
stressing the need for medical and autopsy
information to discriminate among cardiac causes
of sudden death (see Chapter 12).
50Answer 14C
- 14. The family history and presence of
hypertension is suggestive of an autosomal
dominant renal disorder, and the dominant form of
polycystic kidney disease (173900) could be found
in OMIM. This disease may be silent, causing
severe hypertension and presenting with strokes
at an early age. Early diagnosis in at-risk
individuals (this man was at 50 risk) is
important for treatment of hypertension. The
30-year-old man should have imaging studies to
confirm the diagnosis followed by imaging studies
of his two apparently normal sons and siblings.