Litcius/Paper detail

An update on Fanconi anemia: Clinical, cytogenetic and molecular approaches (Review)

Olga Moreno, Angela Paredes, Fernando Suárez‐Obando, Adriana Rojas

2021Biomedical Reports71 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fanconi anemia is a genetic syndrome clinically characterized by congenital malformations that affect several human systems, leads to progressive bone marrow failure and predisposes an individual to cancer, particularly in the urogenital area as well as the head and neck. It is commonly caused by the biallelic compromise of one of 22 genes involved in the FA/BRCA repair pathway in most cases. The diagnosis is based on clinical suspicion and confirmation using genetic analysis, where the chromosomal breakage test is considered the gold standard. Other diagnostic methods used include western blotting, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification and next-generation sequencing. This genetic condition has variable expressiveness, which makes early diagnosis difficult in certain cases. Although early diagnosis does not currently allow for improved cure rates for this condition, it does enable healthcare professionals to perform a specific systematic follow-up and, if indicated, a bone marrow transplantation that improves the mobility and mortality of affected individuals. The present review article is a theoretical revision of the pathophysiology, clinical manifestations and diagnosis methods intended for different specialists and general practitioners to improve the diagnosis of this condition.

Topics & Concepts

Fanconi anemiaMedicineCancerPreimplantation genetic diagnosisAnemiaBone marrow failureBioinformaticsBiologyDNA repairGeneticsInternal medicineGeneHaematopoiesisStem cellPregnancyDNA Repair MechanismsBRCA gene mutations in cancerCarcinogens and Genotoxicity Assessment