Clinical Description
Peters plus syndrome is characterized by anterior chamber eye anomalies, short limbs with broad distal extremities, variable developmental delay / intellectual disability, typical facial features, and cleft lip/palate. Unless otherwise stated, the following description of clinical findings is based on the reports of Maillette de Buy Wenniger-Prick & Hennekam [2002] and Lesnik Oberstein et al [2006].
Eyes. The most common anterior chamber defect is Peters' anomaly, consisting of central corneal clouding, thinning of the posterior cornea, and iridocorneal adhesions. Peters' anomaly may be classified as type I, a mild form, or type II, a more severe form associated with lens abnormalities including cataracts, congenital glaucoma, and a poorer visual prognosis [Yang et al 2004, Zaidman et al 2007]. The eye involvement is usually, but not always, bilateral.
Cataracts and glaucoma can subsequently develop later in life.
Other, often unspecified anterior chamber defects have been reported, such as mild mesenchymal dysgenesis [Hennekam et al 1993]. Less expressed symptoms have included iris coloboma. Variation in ocular symptoms may be extensive within a single family, and even a single individual may have Peters anomaly of one eye and iris coloboma or another less marked mesenchymal dysgenesis of the other eye. Minor anterior chamber anomalies may not be associated with visual impairment.
Growth. Growth deficiency with rhizomelic limb shortening has been invariably present in all reported cases to date. Growth restriction begins prenatally, but birth length is not always below the third percentile.
Growth hormone deficiency with good response to growth hormone replacement therapy has been reported in some children [Maillette de Buy Wenniger-Prick & Hennekam 2002, Lee & Lee 2004].
Adult height range is 128-151 cm in females and 141-155 cm in males.
Development. Developmental delay is observed in 78%-83% of children. Intellectual disability typically ranges from mild to severe, although adults with normal cognitive functioning have been reported. Several affected individuals have been diagnosed with classic autism.
A behavioral phenotype has not been well delineated thus far.
Facial features. Typical facial features include a prominent forehead, short palpebral fissures, a long philtrum, and an exaggerated Cupid's bow of the vermillion of the upper lip. The facial phenotype does not appear to evolve significantly over time.
Cleft lip is present in 45% of individuals and cleft palate in 33%.
Ear anomalies, including preauricular pits, are seen in more than one third of affected individuals. A broad neck occurs in approximately 75% of individuals.
Associated findings
Congenital heart defects (≤33% of individuals), including atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect, subvalvular aortic stenosis, pulmonary stenosis, and bicuspid pulmonary valve
Genitourinary anomalies (10%-19%) including hydronephrosis, renal and ureteral duplication, renal underdevelopment with oligomeganephroma, multicystic dysplastic kidney [
Boog et al 2005], and glomerulocystic kidneys. A single individual with sexual ambiguity has been published [
Siala et al 2013] but no
B3GALTL pathogenic variants could be detected, and the diagnosis remains uncertain in this individual.
Structural brain malformations include hypoplasia or agenesis of the corpus callosum, hydrocephalus [
Krause et al 1969,
Frydman et al 1991], Dandy-Walker malformation and encephalocele [
Schoner et al 2013], and an underdeveloped cerebellum with microcephaly; reported in two children suspected of having Peters plus syndrome
Congenital hypothyroidism; reported in two children with features suggestive of Peters plus syndrome and subsequently described in another affected individual [
Kosaki et al 2006]
Conductive hearing loss; variably present in association with cleft palate but not otherwise a major feature
Prenatal complications. The clinical spectrum appears to include nonviable conceptuses. Several authors have observed an increased rate of miscarriage and stillbirth among mothers of affected children [van Schooneveld et al 1984, Hennekam et al 1993, Thompson et al 1993]. Published prenatal data suggest that 37% of couples with a child with Peters plus syndrome have recurrent (≥2) miscarriages and/or stillbirths.
Polyhydramnios occurred in 18.6% of pregnancies of affected children.
Mortality. Death in early infancy from cardiac failure or undetermined causes has been reported [de Almeida et al 1991, Frydman et al 1991, Lacombe et al 1994].