4.6 Review

Cardiac Defects and Genetic Syndromes: Old Uncertainties and New Insights

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12071047

Keywords

del22q11 deletion syndrome; down syndrome; Ellis-Van Creveld syndrome; congenital heart disease; genetic syndrome

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Recent research has revealed new insights into the connection between genetic diseases and cardiac defects, emphasizing the importance of understanding the relationships between genetic causes, pathogenetic mechanisms, and cardiac phenotypes. Efforts are ongoing to identify specific genotype-phenotype correlations, with the hope that this will lead to improved diagnosis and patient management.
Recent advances in understanding the genetic causes and anatomic subtypes of cardiac defects have revealed new links between genetic etiology, pathogenetic mechanisms and cardiac phenotypes. Although the same genetic background can result in different cardiac phenotypes, and similar phenotypes can be caused by different genetic causes, researchers' effort to identify specific genotype-phenotype correlations remains crucial. In this review, we report on recent advances in the cardiac pathogenesis of three genetic diseases: Down syndrome, del22q11.2 deletion syndrome and Ellis-Van Creveld syndrome. In these conditions, the frequent and specific association with congenital heart defects and the recent characterization of the underlying molecular events contributing to pathogenesis provide significant examples of genotype-phenotype correlations. Defining these correlations is expected to improve diagnosis and patient stratification, and it has relevant implications for patient management and potential therapeutic options.

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