Abstract
BackgroundCornelia de Lange syndrome is the prototype for cohesinopathy disorders, which are characterized by defects in chromosome segregation. Kidney malformations, including nephrogenic rests, are common in Cornelia de Lange syndrome. Only one post-mortem case report has described an association between Wilms tumor and Cornelia de Lange syndrome. Here, we describe the first case of a living child with both diseases.Case presentationNon-anaplastic triphasic nephroblastoma was diagnosed in a patient carrying a not yet reported mutation in NIPBL (c.4920 G > A). The patient had the typical facial appearance and intellectual disability associated with Cornelia de Lange syndrome in absence of limb involvement. The child’s kidneys were examined by ultrasound at 2 years of age to exclude kidney abnormalities associated with the syndrome. She underwent pre-operative chemotherapy and nephrectomy. Seven months later she was healthy and without residual detectable disease.ConclusionThe previous report of such co-occurrence, together with our report and previous reports of nephrogenic rests, led us to wonder if there may be any causal relationship between these two rare entities. The wingless/integrated (Wnt) pathway, which is implicated in kidney development, is constitutively activated in approximately 15–20 % of all non-anaplastic Wilms tumors. Interestingly, the Wnt pathway was recently found to be perturbed in a zebrafish model of Cornelia de Lange syndrome. Mutations in cohesin complex genes and regulators have also been identified in several types of cancers. On the other hand, there is no clear evidence of an increased risk of cancer in Cornelia de Lange syndrome, and no other similar cases have been published since the fist one reported by Cohen, and this prompts to think Wilms tumor and Cornelia de Lange syndrome occurred together in our patient by chance.
Highlights
Cornelia de Lange syndrome is the prototype for cohesinopathy disorders, which are characterized by defects in chromosome segregation
The Wnt pathway was recently found to be perturbed in a zebrafish model of Cornelia de Lange syndrome
There is no clear evidence of an increased risk of cancer in Cornelia de Lange syndrome, and no other similar cases have been published since the fist one reported by Cohen, and this prompts to think Wilms tumor and Cornelia de Lange syndrome occurred together in our patient by chance
Summary
Kidney malformations are commonly seen in CdLS. Selicorni et al [14] reported a 41 % global incidence of renal abnormalities in pediatric CdLS patients. The interaction between cohesin and WNT pathways is of great interest because WNT plays a role in the non-anaplastic forms of WT, which is the histological type in the patient reported here. The latter hypothesis may be supported by the known role of the cohesin network in embryogenesis and by some reports of nephrogenic rests in CdLS [16]. No other similar reports have been published in recent decades, and nephrogenic rests are found in 1 % of unselected pediatric autopsies [35, 36] This rather prompts to think WT and CdLS occurred together by chance. Abbreviations CdLS, Cornelia de Lange Syndrome ; WT, Wilms tumor; CT, computerized tomography ; Wnt, wingless/integrated
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