Steel syndrome: Report of three patients, including monozygotic twins and review of clinical and mutation profiles

Katta M. Girisha*, Prince Jacob, Gandham SriLakshmi Bhavani, Hitesh Shah, Geert R. Mortier

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Steel syndrome (MIM# 615155) is an autosomal recessive skeletal disorder, characterized by dislocations of the hips and radial heads, carpal coalition, short stature, facial dysmorphism, and scoliosis. Until date 47 patients have been reported. However, disease causing variants have been identified only in twenty Puerto Rican and nine non-Puerto Rican families. Here we report two monozygotic twins and a boy from two families with novel missense variants, c.295G > A p.(Ala99 Thr), c.3056C > A p.(Pro1019His) and c.2521G > A p.(Gly841Arg) in COL27A1. We describe for the first time, cleft palate and delayed carpal bone ossification as features of Steel syndrome. We reviewed clinical features in all mutation-proven Steel syndrome patients. Short stature and dislocation/subluxation of hip joint are consistently observed. Other features include dislocated radial heads, scoliosis, lordosis, carpal coalition, facial dysmorphism, hearing loss, bilateral fifth finger clinodactyly, knee deformities and developmental delay. Seven missense variants and eight null variants are reported in COL27A1 until date. We also looked into the genotype-phenotype correlation in Puerto Rican and non-Puerto Rican patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104521
JournalEuropean Journal of Medical Genetics
Volume65
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bilateral hip dislocation
  • COL27A1
  • Cleft palate
  • Steel syndrome

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics
  • Genetics(clinical)

Cite this