Sporadic bilateral retinoblastoma and 13q- chromosomal deletion.

Unilateral retinoblastoma (Rb) is usually a sporadic occurrence while bilateral (multifocal) cases are often familial. Sporadic bilateral Rb associated with a long-arm deletion of a D-group chromosome has been reported in 8 children. We have studied a 6-year-old female with bilateral sporadic retinoblastoma, treated during infancy by enucleation and radiotherapy. Chromosome banding studies on peripheral lymphocytes revealed an interstitial deletion from the long arm of a chromosome 13: del(13) (q12q14). Three additional patients reported in the literature had interstitial 13q- deletions, involving slightly different though overlapping regions. The only chromosomal region consistently missing in all of these 4 cases appears to be part of the lightly staining band 13q14. We, therefore, propose this site as the precise location of a gene (or genes) involved in retinal development. Our patient lacked features of the classic 13q- or 13-ring syndrome, which involves deletion of a more distal portion of the 13 long arm. When compared to reported patients with Rb and 13q-, it became apparent that there may be a separate recognizable syndrome consisting of moderate growth and developmental delay, characteristic facies and external ears, and bilateral sporadic Rb, which is associated with an interstitial 13q- deletion.

[1]  J. Herrmann Delayed mutation as a cause of retinoblastoma: application to genetic counseling. , 1976, Birth defects original article series.

[2]  A. Knudson,et al.  Mutation and childhood cancer: a probabilistic model for the incidence of retinoblastoma. , 1975, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[3]  S. Devesa The incidence of retinoblastoma. , 1975, American journal of ophthalmology.

[4]  M. Delbeke,et al.  Retinoblastoma and long arm deletion of chromosome 13. Attempts to define the deleted segment , 1974, Clinical genetics.

[5]  P. Romano,et al.  D-group deletion syndromes and retinoblastoma. , 1974, American journal of ophthalmology.

[6]  A. Tarkkanen,et al.  OCCURRENCE OF MENTAL RETARDATION IN PATIENTS WITH RETINOBLASTOMA , 1973, Acta ophthalmologica.

[7]  A. Fujimoto,et al.  Retinoblastoma and D-chromosome deletions. , 1973, American journal of human genetics.

[8]  A. Sorsby Bilateral Retinoblastoma: A Dominantly Inherited Affection , 1972, British medical journal.

[9]  M. Seabright A rapid banding technique for human chromosomes. , 1971, Lancet.

[10]  E. Grace,et al.  The 13q- deletion syndrome. , 1971, Journal of medical genetics.

[11]  A. Knudson Mutation and cancer: statistical study of retinoblastoma. , 1971, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[12]  D. Miller,et al.  The 13q-deletion syndrome. , 1969, American journal of human genetics.

[13]  A. Taktikos ASSOCIATION OF RETINOBLASTOMA WITH MENTAL DEFECT AND OTHER PATHOLOGICAL MANIFESTATIONS* , 1964, The British journal of ophthalmology.

[14]  L. Penrose,et al.  Chromosome deletion in a case of retinoblastoma , 1963, Annals of human genetics.

[15]  R. Day,et al.  XXX 21-trisomy and retinoblastoma. , 1963, Lancet.

[16]  J. Neel,et al.  Genetics of retinoblastoma. , 1951, A.M.A. archives of ophthalmology.