PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 2 August 2001, p. e32
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Syndromic Ear Anomalies and Renal Ultrasounds
Received Jan 18, 2001; accepted Apr 9, 2001.
,
From the * University of California-Los Angeles, School of
Medicine; Objective. Although many
pediatricians pursue renal ultrasonography when patients are noted to
have external ear malformations, there is much confusion over which
specific ear malformations do and do not require imaging. The objective
of this study was to delineate characteristics of a child with external
ear malformations that suggest a greater risk of renal anomalies. We
highlight several multiple congenital anomaly (MCA) syndromes that
should be considered in a patient who has both ear and renal
anomalies.
Methods. Charts of patients who had ear anomalies and were
seen for clinical genetics evaluations between 1981 and 2000 at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Medical Center in New Hampshire were reviewed retrospectively. Only
patients who underwent renal ultrasound were included in the chart
review. The literature was reviewed for the epidemiology of renal
anomalies in the general population and in MCA syndromes with external
ear anomalies. We defined a child as having an external ear anomaly when he or she had any of the following: preauricular pits and tags;
microtia; anotia; or cup, lop, and other forms of dysplastic ears. A
child was defined as having a renal anomaly if an ultrasound revealed
any of the following: unilateral or bilateral renal agenesis; hypoplasia; crossed ectopia; horseshoe, pelvic, cystic kidney; hydronephrosis; duplicated ureters; megaureter; or vesicoureteric reflux.
Results. Because clinical genetics assessments were made
by the same clinician at both sites (J.M.G.), data were combined. A
total of 42 patients with ear anomalies received renal ultrasound; 12 (29%) of them displayed renal anomalies. Of the 12 patients with renal
anomalies, 11 (92%) also received a diagnosis of MCA syndrome. Eleven
of 33 patients (33%) with MCA syndromes had renal anomalies, whereas 1 of 9 patients (11%) with isolated ear anomalies had renal anomalies.
Specific disorders seen were CHARGE association, Townes-Brocks
syndrome, branchio-oto-renal syndrome, Nager syndrome, and diabetic
embryopathy.
Conclusions. We conclude that ear malformations are
associated with an increased frequency of clinically significant
structural renal anomalies compared with the general population. This
is due to the observation that auricular malformations often are
associated with specific MCA syndromes that have high incidences of
renal anomalies. These include CHARGE association, Townes-Brocks
syndrome, branchio-oto-renal syndrome, Nager syndrome, Miller syndrome,
and diabetic embryopathy. Patients with auricular anomalies should be
assessed carefully for accompanying dysmorphic features, including
facial asymmetry; colobomas of the lid, iris, and retina; choanal
atresia; jaw hypoplasia; branchial cysts or sinuses; cardiac murmurs;
distal limb anomalies; and imperforate or anteriorly placed anus. If
any of these features are present, then a renal ultrasound is useful
not only in discovering renal anomalies but also in the diagnosis and
management of MCA syndromes themselves. A renal ultrasound should be
performed in patients with isolated preauricular pits, cup ears, or any
other ear anomaly accompanied by 1 or more of the following: other
malformations or dysmorphic features, a family history of deafness,
auricular and/or renal malformations, or a maternal history of
gestational diabetes. In the absence of these findings, renal
ultrasonography is not indicated.
Department of Medical Genetics, Ahmanson Department of
Pediatrics, Steven Spielberg Pediatric Research Center, Burns and Allen
Research Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and Department of
Pediatrics, University of California-Los Angeles; and § Department of
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
University of California-Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.
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