Abstract

BackgroundLeft ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) is a rare congenital heart defect. Gene defections have been found in patients with LVNC and their family members; and MYH7 is the most frequent gene associated with LVNC.MethodsWe performed a complete prenatal ultrasound and echocardiographic examination on a fetus with cardiac abnormality and a parent–child trio whole-exome sequencing to identify the potential genetic causes. When the genetic abnormality in MYH7 was identified in the fetus, we performed echocardiography and genetic screening on its high-risk relatives.ResultsSecond trimester ultrasound and echocardiography showed several malformations in the fetus: Ebstein’s anomaly (EA), heart dilatation, perimembranous ventricle septal defects, mild seroperitoneum, and single umbilical artery. Heterozygous genotyping of a splicing variant allele (NM_00025.3: c.732+G>A) was identified in this fetus and her mother, not her father, indicating a maternal inheritance. Subsequently, direct sequencing confirmed the presence of this splicing variant among her grandmother (mother of mother), mother, older sister, and herself in a heterozygous manner. No PCR products were amplified by qRT-PCR for the RNA samples extracted from peripheral blood cells. In addition to this proband who was diagnosed with EA, her older sister and grandmother (mother of mother) were diagnosed with isolated asymptomatic LVCN, but her mother was just a carrier with no marked clinical manifestations after family screening.ConclusionThe presence of MYH7 splicing variant c.732+G>A can be inherited maternally, and its cardiac phenotypes are different from one carrier to another.

Highlights

  • Left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) is a rare congenital heart defect

  • We describe a fetus with LVNC combined with Ebstein’s anomaly (EA), perimembranous ventricle septal defects (VSD), mild seroperitoneum and single umbilical artery (SUA)

  • Echocardiography performed on the pregnant woman indicated normal cardiac anatomy, but we found the older sister (III-1) and grandmother (II-1) of the fetus were LVNC, which was characterised by left conspicuous ventricular trabeculations and sinusoids communicating with its cavity on the apical four-chamber view, in their apex (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) is a rare congenital heart defect. Gene defections have been found in patients with LVNC and their family members; and MYH7 is the most frequent gene associated with LVNC. Left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) is an increasingly recognized type of cardiomyopathy that is characterized by excessive trabeculations of the left ventricle (LV) [1]. The mechanism of LVNC is not completely known, most researchers assume that genetics play a conspicuous part in the long-term outcomes of patients. Tu et al BMC Medical Genomics (2022) 15:36 with LVNC and their families. Some patients with Ebstein’s anomaly (EA) associated with LVNC have mutations in MYH7, which is the most frequently mutated gene in EA [4]. Due to the variable penetrance of autosomal dominant inheritance [5], genetic testing and prompt screening are not limited to at-risk relatives

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