Abstract

BackgroundKabuki syndrome is a rare disorder characterized by the association of mental retardation and postnatal growth deficiency with distinctive facial appearance, skeletal anomalies, cardiac and renal malformation. Two causative genes have been identified in patients with Kabuki syndrome. Mutation of KMT2D (MLL2) was identified in 55–80 % of patients, while 9–14 % of KMT2D negative patients have mutation in KDM6A gene. So far, few tumors have been reported in patients with Kabuki syndrome. We describe the first case of a patient with spinal ependymoma and Kabuki syndrome.Case presentationA 23 years old girl followed at our Center for KMT2D mutated Kabuki syndrome since she was 4 years old presented with acute lumbar pain and intermittent tactile hyposthenia of the feet. Spine magnetic resonance revealed a lumbar endocanalar mass. She underwent surgical resection of the lesion and histologic examination showed a tanycytic ependymoma (WHO grade II).ConclusionKabuki syndrome is not considered a cancer predisposition syndrome. Nonetheless, a number of tumors have been reported in patients with Kabuki syndrome. Spinal ependymoma is a rare disease in the pediatric and young adult population. Whereas NF2 mutations are frequently associated to ependymoma such an association has never been described in Kabuki syndrome. To our knowledge this is the first case of ependymoma in a KMT2D mutated Kabuki syndrome patient. Despite KMT2D role in cancer has previously been described, no genetic data are available for previously reported Kabuki syndrome patients with tumors. Nonetheless, the association of two rare diseases raises the suspicion for a common determinant.

Highlights

  • Kabuki syndrome is a rare disorder characterized by the association of mental retardation and postnatal growth deficiency with distinctive facial appearance, skeletal anomalies, cardiac and renal malformation

  • Whereas NF2 mutations are frequently associated to ependymoma such an association has never been described in Kabuki syndrome

  • To our knowledge this is the first case of ependymoma in a KMT2D mutated Kabuki syndrome patient

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Summary

Conclusion

KS is a genetic syndrome firstly described in 1981. Patients present with mental and postnatal growth retardation associated with a characteristic facial appearance that resemble that of Kabuki Japanese theatre. Analysis of histone H3 modifications revealed that KMT2D is essential for maintaining the level of global H3K4 monomethylation and that its enzymatic SET domain is directly responsible for this function Because they found that a majority of KMT2D binding sites were located in regions of potential enhancer elements, they supposed that these findings revealed the possible role of KMT2D in tumorigenesis [16]. There are no available data regarding KMT2D mutation status in patients with KS that To our knowledge, this is the first case of spinal ependymoma described in KS. We think that the description of new cases and the genetic characterizations of these patients can help us to better know the role of KMT2D mutation and the natural history of KS.

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