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Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal

We recently showed that variants in GJB2 explained Hearing Impairment (HI) in 34.1% (n = 15/44) of multiplex families in Senegal. The present study aimed to use community-based nationwide recruitment to determine the etiologies and the clinical profiles of childhood HI in Senegal. Participants with...

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Autores principales: Dia, Yacouba, Loum, Birame, Dieng, Yaay Joor Koddu Biigé, Diop, Jean Pascal Demba, Adadey, Samuel Mawuli, Aboagye, Elvis Twumasi, Ba, Seydi Abdoul, Touré, Abdoul Aziz, Niang, Fallou, Diaga Sarr, Pierre, Tidiane Ly, Cheikh Ahmed, Sène, Andrea Regina Gnilane, Kock, Carmen De, Bassier, Rhiyana, Popel, Kalinka, Ndiaye Diallo, Rokhaya, Wonkam, Ambroise, Diallo, Bay Karim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10048257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36980833
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes14030562
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author Dia, Yacouba
Loum, Birame
Dieng, Yaay Joor Koddu Biigé
Diop, Jean Pascal Demba
Adadey, Samuel Mawuli
Aboagye, Elvis Twumasi
Ba, Seydi Abdoul
Touré, Abdoul Aziz
Niang, Fallou
Diaga Sarr, Pierre
Tidiane Ly, Cheikh Ahmed
Sène, Andrea Regina Gnilane
Kock, Carmen De
Bassier, Rhiyana
Popel, Kalinka
Ndiaye Diallo, Rokhaya
Wonkam, Ambroise
Diallo, Bay Karim
author_facet Dia, Yacouba
Loum, Birame
Dieng, Yaay Joor Koddu Biigé
Diop, Jean Pascal Demba
Adadey, Samuel Mawuli
Aboagye, Elvis Twumasi
Ba, Seydi Abdoul
Touré, Abdoul Aziz
Niang, Fallou
Diaga Sarr, Pierre
Tidiane Ly, Cheikh Ahmed
Sène, Andrea Regina Gnilane
Kock, Carmen De
Bassier, Rhiyana
Popel, Kalinka
Ndiaye Diallo, Rokhaya
Wonkam, Ambroise
Diallo, Bay Karim
author_sort Dia, Yacouba
collection PubMed
description We recently showed that variants in GJB2 explained Hearing Impairment (HI) in 34.1% (n = 15/44) of multiplex families in Senegal. The present study aimed to use community-based nationwide recruitment to determine the etiologies and the clinical profiles of childhood HI in Senegal. Participants with early onset HI were included after clinical examination, including audiological assessment by pure tone audiometry and/or auditory brainstem response. We investigated a total of 406 participants from 295 families, recruited from 13/14 administrative regions of Senegal. Male/female ratio was 1.33 (232/174). Prelingual HI was the most common type of HI and accounted for 80% (n = 325 individuals). The mean age at medical diagnosis for congenital HI was computed at 3.59 ± 2.27 years. Audiological evaluation showed sensorineural HI as the most frequently observed HI (89.16%; n = 362 individuals). Pedigree analysis suggested autosomal recessive inheritance in 61.2% (63/103) of multiplex families and sporadic cases in 27 families (26.2%; 27/103), with a consanguinity rate estimated at 93% (84/90 families). Genetic factors were likely involved in 52.7% (214/406) of the cases, followed by environmental causes (29.57%; 120/406). In 72 cases (17.73%), the etiology was unknown. Clinically, non-syndromic HI was the most common type of HI (90.6%; n = 194/214 individuals). Among families segregating syndromic cases, type 2 Waardenburg syndrome was the most common (36.3%; 4/11 families). This study revealed putative genetic factors, mostly associated with high consanguinity rate, as the leading causes of early-onset HI in Senegal. The high consanguinity could provide a good opportunity to identify variants in known and novel genes involved in childhood HI.
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spelling pubmed-100482572023-03-29 Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal Dia, Yacouba Loum, Birame Dieng, Yaay Joor Koddu Biigé Diop, Jean Pascal Demba Adadey, Samuel Mawuli Aboagye, Elvis Twumasi Ba, Seydi Abdoul Touré, Abdoul Aziz Niang, Fallou Diaga Sarr, Pierre Tidiane Ly, Cheikh Ahmed Sène, Andrea Regina Gnilane Kock, Carmen De Bassier, Rhiyana Popel, Kalinka Ndiaye Diallo, Rokhaya Wonkam, Ambroise Diallo, Bay Karim Genes (Basel) Article We recently showed that variants in GJB2 explained Hearing Impairment (HI) in 34.1% (n = 15/44) of multiplex families in Senegal. The present study aimed to use community-based nationwide recruitment to determine the etiologies and the clinical profiles of childhood HI in Senegal. Participants with early onset HI were included after clinical examination, including audiological assessment by pure tone audiometry and/or auditory brainstem response. We investigated a total of 406 participants from 295 families, recruited from 13/14 administrative regions of Senegal. Male/female ratio was 1.33 (232/174). Prelingual HI was the most common type of HI and accounted for 80% (n = 325 individuals). The mean age at medical diagnosis for congenital HI was computed at 3.59 ± 2.27 years. Audiological evaluation showed sensorineural HI as the most frequently observed HI (89.16%; n = 362 individuals). Pedigree analysis suggested autosomal recessive inheritance in 61.2% (63/103) of multiplex families and sporadic cases in 27 families (26.2%; 27/103), with a consanguinity rate estimated at 93% (84/90 families). Genetic factors were likely involved in 52.7% (214/406) of the cases, followed by environmental causes (29.57%; 120/406). In 72 cases (17.73%), the etiology was unknown. Clinically, non-syndromic HI was the most common type of HI (90.6%; n = 194/214 individuals). Among families segregating syndromic cases, type 2 Waardenburg syndrome was the most common (36.3%; 4/11 families). This study revealed putative genetic factors, mostly associated with high consanguinity rate, as the leading causes of early-onset HI in Senegal. The high consanguinity could provide a good opportunity to identify variants in known and novel genes involved in childhood HI. MDPI 2023-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10048257/ /pubmed/36980833 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes14030562 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dia, Yacouba
Loum, Birame
Dieng, Yaay Joor Koddu Biigé
Diop, Jean Pascal Demba
Adadey, Samuel Mawuli
Aboagye, Elvis Twumasi
Ba, Seydi Abdoul
Touré, Abdoul Aziz
Niang, Fallou
Diaga Sarr, Pierre
Tidiane Ly, Cheikh Ahmed
Sène, Andrea Regina Gnilane
Kock, Carmen De
Bassier, Rhiyana
Popel, Kalinka
Ndiaye Diallo, Rokhaya
Wonkam, Ambroise
Diallo, Bay Karim
Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal
title Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal
title_full Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal
title_fullStr Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal
title_full_unstemmed Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal
title_short Childhood Hearing Impairment in Senegal
title_sort childhood hearing impairment in senegal
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10048257/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36980833
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes14030562
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