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3MC syndrome
Disease definition
A rare multiple congenital anomalies syndrome characterized by a spectrum of developmental anomalies including cleft lip and/or palate, craniosynostosis, intellectual disability and/or learning disability, radioulnar synostosis, genital and vesicorenal anomalies. Observed facial dysmorphism includes hypertelorism, blepharophimosis, blepharoptosis, high arched eyebrows. Less common features reported include anterior chamber defects, cardiac anomalies (e.g. ventricular septal defect; see this term), caudal appendage, umbilical hernia/omphalocele and diastasis recti.
ORPHA:293843
Classification level: DisorderSummary
Epidemiology
Prevalence data is limited. To date less than 35 cases have been reported in the literature worldwide.
Clinical description
Diagnosis is often made at birth, in newborns presenting with craniosysnostosis, cleft lip and/or palate and typical facial dysmorphism. Diagnosis could be made antenatally if the fetus presents omphalocele, facial cleft, caudal appendage or sacral anomalies. Children have psychomotor and growth delay. Intellectual disability forms part of the spectrum, and when present is typically moderate; however, patients are sometimes only limited by learning difficulties. Hearing loss is possible and should be monitored. Radioulnar synostosis, vesicorenal and genital anomalies can also occur.
Etiology
3MC syndrome is due to biallelic point mutations or deletions in one of the 3 known causative genes COLEC10 (8q24.12), COLEC11 (2p25.3), and MASP1 (3q27.3). These genes code for factors involved in the activation of complement via the lectin or alternative pathways.
Diagnostic methods
Diagnosis is suspected on clinical presentation (particularly by the association of craniosynostosis, intellectual disability and typical facial dysmorphism) and confirmed by genetic testing including targeted sequencing of the 3 genes COLEC10, COLEC11 and MASP1/3.
Differential diagnosis
Differential diagnosis includes syndromic craniosynostoses, such as Crouzon disease.
Antenatal diagnosis
Prenatal diagnosis is possible if a pathogenic variant has previously been identified in a family member.
Genetic counseling
Transmission is autosomal recessive. Genetic counseling should be offered to at-risk couples (both individuals are carriers of a disease-causing mutation) informing them of the 25% risk of having an affected child at each pregnancy. Consanguineous families are more prone to present this rare disorder.
Management and treatment
Early surgical repair is provided for craniosynostosis, cleft lip/palate, caudal appendage.
Prognosis
Prognosis is linked to visceral malformations, growth restriction and intellectual disability.
A summary on this disease is available in Italiano (2016) Español (2021) Français (2021) Nederlands (2021)
Detailed information
Guidelines
- Anesthesia guidelines
- Czech (2019) - Orphananesthesia
- English (2019) - Orphananesthesia
- Español (2019) - Orphananesthesia
- Português (2019) - Orphananesthesia


Additional information