A case of syndromic congenital hypothyroidism with a 15.2 Mb interstitial deletion on 2q12.3q14.2 involving PAX8

Clin Pediatr Endocrinol. 2023;32(1):65-71. doi: 10.1297/cpe.2022-0061. Epub 2022 Nov 2.

Abstract

Paired box 8 (PAX8) mutations are an established genetic cause of congenital hypothyroidism (CH). The majority of these mutations are found in the protein-coding exons of the gene. The proband, a 3-yr-old girl, had tetralogy of Fallot and polydactyly soon after birth. She was diagnosed with CH in the newborn screening for CH. She had a high serum TSH level (239 mU/L) and low free T4 level (0.7 ng/dL). Ultrasonography revealed thyroid hypoplasia. We performed array comparative genomic hybridization because the patient exhibited a variety of symptoms across multiple organ systems. The analysis revealed a novel heterozygous deletion that spanned a 15.2 Mb region in 2q12.3q14.3 (GRCh37; chr2:109,568,260-124,779,449). There were 71 protein-coding genes in this region, including two genes (PAX8 and GLI2) associated with congenital endocrine disorders. The common clinical features of the two previously reported patients with a total PAX8 deletion and our case were CH, short stature and intellectual disability, but the severity of hypothyroidism and other clinical features were variable. In conclusion, we describe a syndromic CH patient with a novel 2q12.3q14.3 deletion involving PAX8. Patients with CH, whose unifying diagnosis is not obvious, could have a genomic deletion involving PAX8.

Keywords: PAX8; chromosome deletion; congenital hypothyroidism; genetics.

Publication types

  • Case Reports