Cohen Syndrome
- PMID: 20301655
- Bookshelf ID: NBK1482
Cohen Syndrome
Excerpt
Clinical characteristics: Cohen syndrome is characterized by early-onset hypotonia, developmental delay, and moderate-to-profound intellectual disability; at least 20% of individuals are unable to communicate verbally. In infancy and childhood weight gain is poor due to feeding difficulties. However, in the early teen years rapid weight gain (without a change in appetite, food intake, or activity) leads to significant truncal obesity; short stature is common. Ophthalmologic findings include early childhood onset of progressive high myopia and retinal dystrophy. Mild-to-moderate neutropenia, present in almost all individuals, may be associated with recurrent infections and/or aphthous ulcers. Joint laxity can lead to kyphosis and scoliosis. Individuals with Cohen syndrome are described as having a cheerful and friendly disposition.
Diagnosis/testing: The diagnosis of Cohen syndrome is established in a proband with suggestive findings and biallelic pathogenic variants in VPS13B identified by molecular genetic testing.
Management: Treatment of manifestations: Early educational intervention and physical, occupational, and speech therapy to help address developmental delay and hypotonia; spectacle correction for refractive errors and low vision services for the visually impaired; treatment of recurrent infections per standard care (with caution regarding medications that could decrease neutrophil count); treatment of scoliosis and kyphosis by an experienced orthopedist.
Surveillance: Routing monitoring of growth and weight gain, developmental progress and educational needs, neurologic findings for emergence of new issues, ophthalmologic findings, possible emergence of scoliosis or kyphosis, and neutropenia and infection risk.
Genetic counseling: Cohen syndrome is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. If both parents are known to be heterozygous for a VPS13B pathogenic variant, each sib of an affected individual has at conception a 25% chance of being affected, a 50% chance of being an asymptomatic carrier, and a 25% chance of being unaffected and not a carrier. Once the VPS13B pathogenic variants have been identified in an affected family member, carrier testing for at-risk relatives and prenatal/preimplantation genetic testing are possible.
Copyright © 1993-2026, University of Washington, Seattle. GeneReviews is a registered trademark of the University of Washington, Seattle. All rights reserved.
Sections
References
-
- Atabek ME, Keskin M, Kurtoglu S, Kumandas S. Cohen syndrome with insulin resistance and seizure. Pediatr Neurol. 2004;30:61–3. - PubMed
-
- Balikova I, Lehesjoki AE, de Ravel TJ, Thienpont B, Chandler KE, Clayton-Smith J, Träskelin AL, Fryns JP, Vermeesch JR. Deletions in the VPS13B (COH1) gene as a cause of Cohen syndrome. Hum Mutat. 2009;30:E845–54. - PubMed
-
- Biesecker LG, Adam MP, Alkuraya FS, Amemiya AR, Bamshad MJ, Beck AE, Bennett JT, Bird LM, Carey JC, Chung B, Clark RD, Cox TC, Curry C, Dinulos MBP, Dobyns WB, Giampietro PF, Girisha KM, Glass IA, Graham JM Jr, Gripp KW, Haldeman-Englert CR, Hall BD, Innes AM, Kalish JM, Keppler-Noreuil KM, Kosaki K, Kozel BA, Mirzaa GM, Mulvihill JJ, Nowaczyk MJM, Pagon RA, Retterer K, Rope AF, Sanchez-Lara PA, Seaver LH, Shieh JT, Slavotinek AM, Sobering AK, Stevens CA, Stevenson DA, Tan TY, Tan WH, Tsai AC, Weaver DD, Williams MS, Zackai E, Zarate YA. A dyadic approach to the delineation of diagnostic entities in clinical genomics. Am J Hum Genet. 2021;108:8-15. - PMC - PubMed
-
- Boschann F, Fischer-Zirnsak B, Wienker TF, Holtgrewe M, Seelow D, Eichhorn B, Döhnert S, Fahsold R, Horn D, Graul-Neumann LM. An intronic splice site alteration in combination with a large deletion affecting VPS13B (COH1) causes Cohen syndrome. Eur J Med Genet. 2020;63:103973. - PubMed
-
- Bugiani M, Gyftodimou Y, Tsimpouka P, Lamantea E, Katzaki E, d'Adamo P, Nakou S, Georgoudi N, Grigoriadou M, Tsina E, Kabolis N, Milani D, Pandelia E, Kokotas H, Gasparini P, Giannoulia-Karantana A, Renieri A, Zeviani M, Petersen MB. Cohen syndrome resulting from a novel large intragenic COH1 deletion segregating in an isolated Greek island population. Am J Med Genet A. 2008;146A:2221–6. - PubMed
Publication types
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical