Clinical Description
KCNK9 imprinting syndrome is characterized by congenital central hypotonia, severe feeding difficulties, delayed development/intellectual disability, and dysmorphic features. To date 19 individuals with a molecularly confirmed diagnosis have been reported: 15 from an Arab-Israeli family [Barel et al 2008] and four representing simplex cases (i.e., a single occurrence in a family) [Graham et al 2016]. Note that 15 individuals from the original family were reexamined for the report by Graham et al [2016].
The phenotype has been severe and consistent in all individuals examined to date.
Congenital central hypotonia, evident in neonates, is associated with decreased movement, lethargy, weak cry, weak facial muscles, poor suck, and feeding difficulties. Prenatally, hypotonia can manifest as decreased fetal movement and breech presentation necessitating cesarean section.
While the hypotonia may improve over time, it is present during childhood and into adulthood. Occasionally weakness of proximal muscles and the supra- and infrascapular and trapezius muscles is observed later in life. Generalized hypotonia at an early age followed by weakness of proximal muscles can lead to contractures and scoliosis.
Poor feeding can cause failure to thrive during infancy unless managed appropriately (see Management). Significant dysphagia of solid foods due to hypotonia and poorly coordinated swallowing typically persists until puberty [Barel et al 2008].
Cleft palate (including full cleft, submucous cleft or velopharyngeal insufficiency) is present in 42% of affected individuals.
Delayed motor and speech milestones / intellectual disability are observed in all individuals with the KCNK9 imprinting syndrome. Intellectual disability is usually moderately severe with limited speech. Wide-based gait can also be observed.
Other
Occasional neurologic findings include clonus and rarely seizures.
Subtle dysmorphic features that can evolve over time include dolichocephaly with a narrow forehead; mild atrophy of the temporalis and masseter muscles; myopathic elongated facies with a tented vermillion of the upper lip and short broad philtrum; reduced facial movement; mild micro/retrognathia with relatively prominent maxillary and premaxillary regions; medially flared, arched eyebrows; and ptosis [Graham et al 2016].
Body habitus is asthenic; a long neck and tapered chest are evident in later childhood. Fingers are tapered; fetal fingertip pads are prominent [Barel et al 2008].
A pilonidal dimple or sinus is evident in most individuals. Rarely, it is associated with a filar cyst (cystic structure in the proximal filum terminale) and lipoma in the sacral region.
Some affected individuals have transient neonatal hypoglycemia associated with hyperinsulinism that resolves with diazoxide treatment [Graham et al 2016].
Decreased lacrimation and increased risk for corneal dryness can be observed.
Sleep disturbance can be due to both central and obstructive sleep apnea, and usually responds to BiPAP.
Normal findings typically include: hearing, ophthalmologic evaluation (including vision), neuroimaging, and muscle biopsy (which may show nonspecific findings such as fiber-size disproportion). X-rays of long bones are normal [Barel et al 2008].