Radiology Case Reports (Nov 2024)

A familial case of diffuse periventricular nodular heterotopia identified prenatally: Filamin A defect as the probable cause

  • Mariana Tomásio Neves, MD,
  • André Luís Borges, MD,
  • Guilherme Martins, MD,
  • Graça Sá, MD,
  • Teresa Loureiro, PhD,
  • Oana Moldovan, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 11
pp. 5393 – 5398

Abstract

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Periventricular nodular heterotopia (PNH) is a neuronal migration defect characterized by the presence of ectopic grey matter nodules adjacent to the walls of the lateral ventricles. The main genetic etiology of PNH are variants in the Filamin A gene (FLNA, MIM #300049), located in the X chromosome. It affects mostly females (embryonic lethality in males), with about 50% of cases inherited from healthy mothers or with a mild phenotype. It is associated with epilepsy (75%-90%), cardiovascular (65%) and pulmonary pathologies (25%).A 28-year-old primigravida was referred for prenatal care in obstetrics department because of personal history of obliterative bronchiolitis. She has a family history of asthma (mother and sister) and adulthood-onset epilepsy (father). The pregnancy was uneventful up to 20 weeks and 3 days when bilateral periventricular irregularities and mega cisterna magna were identified on ultrasound in a female fetus. Neurosonography was performed, which led to the hypothesis of diffuse PNH, supported by MRI. The hypothesis of PNH associated to the FLNA gene was made. Brain MRI on the pregnant woman was requested, which confirmed a similar pattern of PNH. The arrayCGH (PerkinElmer, Prenatal filter 37K) was normal, and whole exome sequencing identified the likely pathogenic c.1554del p.(Val519fs*) variant in the FLNA gene.We present a case of X-linked hereditary PNH that highlights the value of fetal neurosonography in making a putative diagnosis. The diagnosis was supported by MRI in both fetus and mother. The investigation was supplemented by genetic studies, which confirmed the diagnosis.

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