A longitudinal characterization of the adaptive and behavioral profile in Sotos syndrome

Author:

Siracusano Martina12ORCID,Dante Caterina2,Sarnataro Rachele2,Arturi Lucrezia2,Riccioni Assia2,Carloni Elisa2,Cicala Mariagrazia1,Gialloreti Leonardo Emberti1,Galasso Cinzia23,Conteduca Giuseppina4,Coviello Domenico5,Mazzone Luigi23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedicine and Prevention University of Rome Tor Vergata Rome Italy

2. Child Neurology and Psychiatry Unit, Department of Wellbeing of Mental and Neurological, Dental and Sensory Organ Health Policlinico Tor Vergata Hospital Rome Italy

3. Systems Medicine Department University of Rome Tor Vergata Rome Italy

4. Biotherapy Unit, IRCCS San Martino Genoa Italy

5. Laboratory of Human Genetics, IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini Genoa Italy

Abstract

AbstractDelineation of a developmental and behavioral trajectory is a key‐topic in the context of a genetic syndrome. Short‐ and long‐term implications concerning school outcome, independent living, and working opportunities are strictly linked to the cognitive and behavioral profile of an individual. For the first time, we present a longitudinal characterization of the adaptive and behavioral profile of a pediatric sample of 32 individuals with Sotos Syndrome (SoS) (18 males, 14 females; mean age 9.7 ± 4 years, eight carrying the NSD1 5q35 microdeletion and 24 with an intragenic mutation). We performed two clinical assessments: at baseline (T0) and at distance evaluation (T1) of adaptive and behavioral skills with a mean distance of 1.56 ± 0.95 years among timepoints. Our study reports a stability over the years—meant as lack of statistically significant clinical worsening or improvement—of both adaptive and behavioral skills investigated, regardless the level of Intellectual Quotient and chronological age at baseline. However, participants who did not discontinue intervention among T0 and T1, were characterized by a better clinical profile in terms of adaptive skills and behavioral profile at distance, emphasizing that uninterrupted intervention positively contributes to the developmental trajectory.

Funder

Ministero della Salute

Publisher

Wiley

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