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{{Short description|Chromosome disorder in women}} | |||
{{Infobox_Disease | | |||
{{cs1 config|name-list-style=vanc|display-authors=6}} | |||
Name = Triple X syndrome | | |||
{{good article}} | |||
Image = | | |||
{{Infobox medical condition | |||
Caption = | | |||
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|name = Trisomy X | ||
|synonyms = 47,XXX, triple X syndrome, triplo-X syndrome, XXX syndrome | |||
ICD10 = {{ICD10|Q|97|0|q|90}} | | |||
|image = File:Trisomy X facial phenotypes (cropped).png | |||
ICD9 = | | |||
|alt = Three females{{emdash}}a toddler, a preteen, and a young woman{{emdash}}with trisomy X. The toddler and the preteen both have slight dysmorphic features; their eyes are spaced slightly wider apart than average, and the toddler has an extra fold of skin in the inner corners of her eyes. The young woman has no dysmorphic features. | |||
ICDO = | | |||
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|caption = Three individuals with trisomy X | ||
|symptoms = Tall stature, skeletal anomalies, minor neurocognitive and behavioural difficulties | |||
}} | |||
|onset = Conception | |||
'''Triple X syndrome''' (also known as '''triplo-X''', '''trisomy X''', '''XXX syndrome''', and '''47,XXX aneuploidy''') is a form of ] variation characterized by the presence of an extra ] in each ] of a ]. The condition occurs only in females. Females with triple X syndrome have three X chromosomes instead of two. The ] reads 47,XXX. A mosaic form also occurs where only a percentage of the body cells contain XXX while the remainder carry XX. The extent to which an individual is affected by the condition will depend upon the proportion of XXX to XX throughout. <ref>Medical text written August 2002 by Contact a Family. Last reviewed February 2008 by Dr R Stanhope, Consultant Paediatric Endocrinologist, Institute of Child Health, London, UK. http://www.cafamily.org.uk/medicalinformation/conditions/azlistings/t40_1.html</ref> Triple X results during division of a parent's reproductive cells and occurs about once in every 1,000 female births. Unlike most other chromosomal conditions (such as ]), there is usually no distinguishable difference to the naked eye between women with triple X and the rest of the female population. | |||
|duration = Lifelong | |||
|causes = ] | |||
|diagnosis = ] | |||
|frequency = approximately 1 in 1,000 (female) | |||
}} | |||
'''Trisomy X''', also known as '''triple X syndrome''' and characterized by the ]{{NoteTag|'Karyotype' as a term has multiple meanings, all of which are used here. It may refer to a person's chromosome complement, to the test used to discern said chromosome complement, or to an image of chromosomes ascertained via such a test.<ref name="glossary">{{cite web|url=https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/Karyotype|title=Genetics Glossary: Karyotype|work=National Human Genome Research Institute|vauthors=Biesecker BB|access-date=24 May 2021}}</ref>}} '''47,XXX''', is a ] in which a female has an extra copy of the ]. It is relatively common and occurs in 1 in 1,000 females, but is rarely diagnosed; fewer than 10% of those with the condition know they have it. | |||
Those who have symptoms can have ], mild ]s such as ] (wide-spaced eyes) and ] (incurved ]s), early ], and increased height. As the symptoms of trisomy X are often not serious enough to prompt a karyotype test, many cases of trisomy X are diagnosed before birth via ] tests such as ]. Research on females with the disorder finds that cases which were diagnosed postnatally, having been referred for testing because of obvious symptoms, are generally more severe than those diagnosed prenatally. Most females with trisomy X live normal lives, although their socioeconomic status is reduced compared to the general population. | |||
==Cause== | |||
Trisomy X occurs via a process called ], in which normal cell division is interrupted and produces ]s with too many or too few chromosomes. Nondisjunction is a random occurrence, and most girls and women with trisomy X have no family histories of chromosome ].{{NoteTag|Aneuploidy is the presence of too many or too few chromosomes in a cell.<ref name="eh">{{cite journal |vauthors=LeFevre NM, Sundermeyer RL |title=Fetal Aneuploidy: Screening and Diagnostic Testing |journal=Am Fam Physician |volume=101 |issue=8 |pages=481–488 |date=April 2020 |pmid=32293844 |doi= |url=https://www.aafp.org/afp/2020/0415/p481.html |access-date=21 August 2021}}</ref>}} ] is mildly associated with trisomy X. Women with trisomy X can have children of their own, who in most cases do not have an increased risk of chromosome disorders; women with ] trisomy X, who have a mix of 46,XX (the typical female karyotype) and 47,XXX cells, may have an increased risk of chromosomally abnormal children. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
First reported in 1959 by the geneticist ], the early understanding of trisomy X was that of a debilitating disability observed in institutionalized women. Beginning in the 1960s, studies of people with sex chromosome aneuploidies from birth to adulthood found that they are often only mildly affected, fitting in with the general population, and that many never needed the attention of clinicians because of the condition. | |||
Triple X syndrome is not inherited, but usually occurs as an event during the formation of ]s (] and ]). An error in cell division called ] can result in reproductive cells with additional chromosomes. For example, an ] or sperm cell may gain an extra copy of the X chromosome as a result of the non-disjunction. If one of these cells contributes to the genetic makeup of a child, the child will have an extra X chromosome in each of her cells. In some cases, trisomy X occurs during cell division in early ]nic development. | |||
==Presentation== | |||
Some females with triple X syndrome have an extra X chromosome in only some of their cells. These cases are called 46,XX/47,XXX ]s. | |||
Trisomy X has variable effects, ranging from no symptoms at all to significant disability.<ref name="orphanet1">{{cite journal|title=A review of trisomy X (47,XXX)|journal=Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases|volume=5|issue=8|date=11 May 2010|vauthors=Tartaglia NR, Howell S, Sutherland A, Wilson R, Wilson L|page=8|doi=10.1186/1750-1172-5-8|pmid=20459843|pmc=2883963|doi-access=free}}</ref> Severity varies between people diagnosed prenatally (before birth) and postnatally (after birth), and postnatal cases are more severe on average.<ref name="Tartaglia2020">{{cite journal|title=Early neurodevelopmental and medical profile in children with sex chromosome trisomies: Background for the prospective eXtraordinarY Babies Study to identify early risk factors and targets for intervention|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics|volume=184|issue=2|pages=428–443|date=June 2020|vauthors=Tartaglia N, Howell S, Davis S, Kowal K, Tanda T, Brown M, Boada C, Alston A, Crawford L, Thompson T, van Rijn S, Wilson R, Janusz J, Ross J|doi=10.1002/ajmg.c.31807|pmid=32506668|pmc=7413625}}</ref> Symptoms associated with trisomy X include ], mild developmental delay, subtle physical and skeletal anomalies, increased rates of mental health concerns, and earlier age of menopause.<ref name="orphanet1" /><ref name="ejhg1">{{cite journal|title=Triple X syndrome: a review of the literature|journal=European Journal of Human Genetics|volume=18|issue=3|pages=265–271|date=1 July 2009|vauthors=Otter M, ((Schrander-Stumpel CTRM)), ((Curfs LMG))|doi=10.1038/ejhg.2009.109|pmid=19568271|pmc=2987225|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
== |
===Physiological=== | ||
The physical and physiological impacts of trisomy X tend to be subtle.{{sfn|Skuse, Printzlau & Wolstencroft|2018|p=363}} Tall stature is one of the major physical associations of trisomy X. Prior to age four, most young females with trisomy X are average height; growth picks up after this age, and is particularly rapid between the ages of four and eight. Of girls with trisomy X aged six to thirteen, 40% are above the 90th percentile in height.<ref name="ejhg1" /> The added height in trisomy X is primarily in the limbs, with long legs and a shorter sitting height.<ref name="orphanet1" /> Though head circumference is generally below the 50th percentile,<ref name="ejhg1" /> ], a head circumference below the 5th percentile, is rare.<ref name="orphanet1" /> | |||
Minor skeletal and ] anomalies are associated with trisomy X. Subtle ]s seen in some females with trisomy X include ] (wide-spaced eyes), ] (an additional fold of skin in the corners of the eyes), and upslanting ]s (the opening between the eyelids). These differences are usually minor and do not impact the daily lives of girls and women with the condition.<ref name="orphanet1" /> Other skeletal anomalies associated with trisomy X include ] (incurved ]s), ] (the fusion of the long bones in the forearm),<ref name="nord">{{cite web|url=https://rarediseases.org/rare-diseases/trisomy-x/|title=Trisomy X|work=National Organization for Rare Diseases|vauthors=NORD, Samango-Sprouse C|date=4 April 2024|access-date=16 June 2024}}</ref> flat feet, and hyper-extensible joints.<ref name="psychopathology">{{cite book|title=Psychopathology of Childhood and Adolescence: A Neuropsychological Approach|pages=594–596|chapter=Sex Chromosome Aneuploidies| vauthors = Wilson R, Bennett E, Howell SE, Tartaglia N |publisher=Springer Publishing|location=New York|year=2012|isbn=978-0826109200}}</ref> These findings are not unique to trisomy X, but rather are seen in sex chromosome aneuploidy disorders as a whole.<ref name="xyclinic">{{cite journal|title=The eXtraordinarY Kids Clinic: an interdisciplinary model of care for children and adolescents with sex chromosome aneuploidy|journal=Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare|volume=8|issue=1|date=17 July 2015|vauthors=Tartaglia N, Howell S, Wilson R, Janusz J, Boada R, Martin S, Frazier JB, Pfeiffer M, Regan K, McSwegin S, Zeitler P|pages=323–334|doi=10.2147/JMDH.S80242|pmid=26229481|pmc=4514383 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
Because the vast majority of Triple X females are never diagnosed, it may be very difficult to make generalizations about the effects of this syndrome. The samples that were studied were small and may be non-representative or biased. | |||
Severe internal disease is rare in trisomy X. ] conditions are more common than in the general population, particularly kidney and ovary malformations.<ref name="orphanet1" /> The autoimmune disease ] is more common in women than men by a factor of 9 and the risk is further exacerbated in Trisomy X by a factor of approximately 2.5.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Tangtanatakul |first1=Pattarin |last2=Lei |first2=Yao |last3=Jaiwan |first3=Krisana |last4=Yang |first4=Wanling |last5=Boonbangyang |first5=Manon |last6=Kunhapan |first6=Punna |last7=Sodsai |first7=Pimpayao |last8=Mahasirimongkol |first8=Surakameth |last9=Pisitkun |first9=Prapaporn |last10=Yang |first10=Yi |last11=Eu-Ahsunthornwattana |first11=Jakris |last12=Aekplakorn |first12=Wichai |last13=Jinawath |first13=Natini |last14=Neelapaichit |first14=Nareemarn |last15=Hirankarn |first15=Nattiya |date=2024 |title=Association of genetic variation on X chromosome with systemic lupus erythematosus in both Thai and Chinese populations |journal=Lupus Science & Medicine |language=en |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=e001061 |doi=10.1136/lupus-2023-001061 |issn=2053-8790 |pmc=10928741 |pmid=38458775}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Luo |first1=Fang |last2=Ye |first2=Qiao |last3=Shen |first3=Jie |date=2022 |title=Systemic lupus erythematosus with trisomy X: a case report and review of the literature |journal=Journal of Medical Case Reports |volume=16 |issue=1 |pages=281 |doi=10.1186/s13256-022-03478-5 |doi-access=free |issn=1752-1947 |pmc=9295272 |pmid=35850774}}</ref> According to one study ] is also more common in trisomy X than in the general population.<ref name="ar">{{cite journal|title=X chromosome dose and sex bias in autoimmune diseases: increased prevalence of 47,XXX in systemic lupus erythematosus and Sjögren's syndrome|journal=Arthritis & Rheumatology|volume=68|issue=5|pages=1290–1300|date=29 December 2015|vauthors=Liu K, Kurien BT, Zimmerman SL, Kaufman KM, Taft DH, Kottyan LC, Lazaro S, Weaver CA, Ice JA, Adler AJ, Chodosh J, Radfar L, Rasmussen A, Stone DU, Lewis DM, Li S, Koelsch KA, Igoe A, Talsania M, Kumar J, Maier-Moore JS, Harris VM, Gopalakrishnan R, Jonsson R, Lessard JA, Lu X, Gottenberg JE, Anaya JM, Cunninghame-Graham DS, ((Huang AJW)), Brennan MT, Hughes P, Xie G, Ng WF, Nordmark G, Eriksson P, Omdal R, Rhodus NL, Rischmueller M, Rohrer M, Segal BM, Vyse TJ, Wahren-Herlenius M, Witte T, Pons-Estel B, ((Alarcón-Riquelme M)), Guthridge JM, James JA, Lessard CJ, Kelly JA, Thompson SD, Gaffney PM, Montgomery CG, Edberg JC, Kimberly RP, Alarcón GS, Langefeld CL, Gilkeson GS, Kamen DL, Tsao BP, McCune WJ, Salmon JE, Merrill JT, Weisman MH, Wallace DJ, Utset TO, Bottinger EP, Amos CI, Siminovitch KA, Mariette X, Sivils KL, Harley JB, Scofield RH|doi=10.1002/art.39560|pmid=26713507|pmc=5019501|doi-access=free}}</ref> Conditions such as ], ], ], and ] have also been linked to sex chromosome aneuploidies as a whole, including trisomy X.<ref name="xyclinic" /> Although heart defects are common in ],<ref>{{cite book|title=Genetic Disorders and the Fetus: Diagnosis, Prevention, and Treatment|veditors=Milunksy A, Milunsnky JM |author=Milunsky JM|year=2016|edition=7|publisher=John Wiley and Sons |location=Hoboken|chapter=Prenatal Diagnosis of Sex Chromosome Abnormalities|at=Section "49,XXXXX"}}</ref> they are no more frequent in trisomy X than the general population.<ref name="ejhg1" /> | |||
Because of the ], inactivation, and formation of a ] in all female cells, only one ] is active at any time. Thus, Triple X syndrome most often has only mild effects, or has no unusual effects at all. Symptoms may include tall stature; small head (microcephaly); vertical skinfolds that may cover the inner corners of the eyes (epicanthal folds); delayed development of certain motor skills, speech and language; learning disabilities, such as dyslexia; or weak muscle tone.<ref>http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/triple-x-syndrome/DS01090/DSECTION=symptoms</ref> The symptoms vary from person to person, with some women being more affected than others. There are seldom any observable physical anomalies in Triple X females, other than being taller than average. | |||
] starts around the expected age and progresses as normal. Median ] levels are lower corresponding to a smaller ], menopause begins five years earlier on average and there is an increased risk of ] (POF). Among women with POF Trisomy X is over-represented by a factor of five<ref name="Rogol2023">{{cite journal | vauthors = Rogol AD | title = Sex chromosome aneuploidies and fertility: 47,XXY, 47,XYY, 47,XXX and 45,X/47,XXX | journal = Endocrine Connections | volume = 12 | issue = 9 | date = August 2023 | pmid = 37399523 | pmc = 10448573 | doi = 10.1530/EC-22-0440 }}</ref> and those with both trisomy and autoimmune disease are at extra high risk.<ref name="orphanet1" /> The rate of miscarriage is normal and fertility has been reported to be either unaffected or somewhat lower than expected. ] and similar interventions are seldom necessary.<ref name="Rogol2023"/> | |||
Girls with Triple X syndrome are at increased risk of delayed language development, EEG abnormalities, motor-coordination problems and auditory-processing disorders, and scoliosis. They tend to show accelerated growth until puberty. Premature ovarian failure seems to be more prevalent in these women, but most Triple X women seem to have normal fertility. Triple X females are more likely to struggle with personality and psychological problems, and low self-esteem, but these respond well to treatment. Triple X girls are at increased risk of poor academic results at school, and some may need special education. Sometimes, they may suffer from anxiety and be very shy, and this may affect their relations with school peers. They seem to feel much better after leaving school. They benefit very much from a stable home environment. However, much more research is needed to fully understand the effects of this condition.<ref>http://www.nature.com/ejhg/journal/v18/n3/full/ejhg2009109a.html</ref> | |||
===Neurodevelopmental=== | |||
==Incidence== | |||
] | |||
General cognitive functioning is reduced in trisomy X, with an average ] of 85{{endash}}90. ] tends to be higher than ].<ref name="Tartaglia2020"/> Though ] is rare, it is more prevalent than in the general population, occurring in about 5{{endash}}10% of females with trisomy X{{sfn|Skuse, Printzlau & Wolstencroft|2018|p=363}} compared to approximately 1% of the broader population.<ref name="rdd">{{cite journal|title=Prevalence of intellectual disability: a meta-analysis of population-based studies|journal=Research in Developmental Disabilities|volume=32|issue=2|pages=419–436|date=April 2011|vauthors=Maulik PK, Mascarenhas MN, Mathers CD, Dua T, Saxena S|doi=10.1016/j.ridd.2010.12.018|pmid=21236634}}</ref> While the average is depressed, the effect of trisomy X varies substantially, and some women are highly intelligent.<ref name="nelson">{{cite book|title=Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics|edition=21st | vauthors = Kliegman RM, St Geme J |chapter=Hypofunction of the Ovaries|pages=3005–3006|year=2019|publisher=Elsevier|location=Amsterdam|isbn=978-0323529501}}</ref> | |||
Infant milestones are normal to slightly delayed. ] is more common than delays in early ].<ref name="Tartaglia2020"/> Speech therapy is needed in 40%{{endash}}90% of girls with trisomy X at some point in their lives.<ref name="dmcn">{{cite journal|title=Neurocognitive outcomes of individuals with a sex chromosome trisomy: XXX, XYY, or XXY: a systematic review|journal=Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology|volume=52|issue=2|pages=119–129|date=February 2010|vauthors=Leggett V, Jacobs P, Nation K, Scerif G, ((Bishop DVM))|doi=10.1111/j.1469-8749.2009.03545.x|pmid=20059514|pmc=2820350}}</ref> More than 75% experience learning disabilities, frequently related to reading skills,<ref name="Tartaglia2020"/> but expressive language skills tend to be more affected than receptive skills.<ref name="van Rijn2019">{{cite journal|title=A review of neurocognitive functioning and risk for psychopathology in sex chromosome trisomy (47,XXY, 47,XXX, 47,XYY)|journal=Current Opinion in Psychiatry|volume=32|issue=2|pages=79–84|date=15 July 2019|vauthors=van Rijn S|doi=10.1097/YCO.0000000000000471|pmid=30689602|pmc=6687415}}</ref> ] may also be diminished.<ref name="Green2019">{{Cite journal |last1=Green |first1=Tamar |last2=Flash |first2=Shira |last3=Reiss |first3=Allan L. |date=January 2019 |title=Sex differences in psychiatric disorders: what we can learn from sex chromosome aneuploidies |journal=Neuropsychopharmacology |language=en |volume=44 |issue=1 |pages=9–21 |doi=10.1038/s41386-018-0153-2 |issn=1740-634X |pmc=6235860 |pmid=30127341}}</ref> | |||
Triple X syndrome occurs in around 1 in 1,000 girls. On average, five to ten girls with triple X syndrome are born in the ] each day.<ref name=ghr>{{cite web |author=National Library of Medicine |title=Genetics Home Reference: Triple X syndrome |year=2007 |url=http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/condition=triplexsyndrome |accessdate=2007‑03‑22}}</ref> | |||
] in trisomy X demonstrates decreased whole brain volumes, correlated with overall intellectual functioning, although ] thickness is unaffected. These findings are common to X-chromosome polysomy syndromes including ].<ref name="Green2019"/> Epilepsy or ] abnormalities may be more common in those with trisomy X, particularly those who are also intellectually disabled.<ref name="orphanet1" /><ref name="axys"/> Epilepsy in sex chromosome aneuploidies as a whole is mild, amenable to treatment, and often attenuates or disappears with time. ] is reported in approximately a quarter of women with trisomy X and responds to the same treatments as in the general population.<ref name="axys">{{cite web|url=https://genetic.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/AXYS-Consensus-Document-Seizures-and-Tremors.-pdf.pdf|title=Seizures and tremor in people with X & Y chromosome variations|work=AXYS: Association for X and Y Chromosome Variations|vauthors=AXYS, Berry Kravis E|date=December 2020|access-date=11 May 2021}}</ref> | |||
==First case== | |||
The first published report of a woman with a 47,XXX karyotype was by ], et al. at ] in ], in 1959. It was found in a 35‑year-old, 5 ft. 9 in. (176 cm) tall, 128 lb. (58.2 kg) woman who had ] at age 19; her mother was age 41 and her father was 40 at the time of her conception.<!-- | |||
--><ref name=jacobs>{{cite journal |author=Jacobs PA, Baikie AG, Brown WM, MacGregor TN, Maclean N, Harnden DG |month=September 26, |year=1959 |title=Evidence for the existence of the human "super female" |journal=] |volume=274 |issue=7100 |pages=423–5 |pmid=14406377 |url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6T1B-49JVK1P-NW&_user=10&_coverDate=09%2F26%2F1959&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=9ff3228399f35afd36bda605db23eb23 |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(59)90415-5}}</ref> | |||
], where people have difficulty regulating their actions and emotions, is more prevalent amongst those with trisomy X than the general population.<ref name="van Rijn2019" />{{sfn|Skuse, Printzlau & Wolstencroft|2018|p=363}} ] disorders are more common in trisomy X, and approximately 15% of girls with trisomy X have significant symptoms indicative of such disorders,<ref name="van Rijn2019" /> compared to less than 1% of girls in the general population.<ref name="mmwr">{{cite journal|title=Prevalence of autism spectrum disorder among children aged 8 years — Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network, 11 sites, United States|journal=MMWR. Surveillance Summaries|volume=69|issue=4|pages=1–12|date=27 March 2020|vauthors=Maenner MJ, Shaw KA, Baio J, Washington A, Patrick M, DiRienzo M, Christensen DL, Wiggins LD, Pettygrove S, Andrews JG, Lopez M, Hudson A, Baroud T, Schwenk Y, White T, Rosenberg CR, Lee LC, Harrington RA, Huston M, Hewitt A, Esler A, Hall-Lande J, Poynter JN, Hallas-Muchow L, Constantino JN, Fitzgerald RT, Zahorodny W, Shenouda J, Daniels JL, Warren Z, Vehorn A, Salinas A, Durkin MS, Dietz PM|doi=10.15585/mmwr.ss6904a1|pmid=32214087|pmc=7119644}}</ref> The risk of ] is also increased and up to 50% of those with Trisomy X are affected.<ref name="van Rijn2019" /> | |||
==Diagnosis== | |||
The vast majority of Triple X women are never diagnosed, unless they undergo tests for other medical reasons later in life. Triple X can be diagnosed by a blood test which is able to look at a person’s chromosomes (karyotype). | |||
===Psychological=== | |||
Triple X syndrome can be diagnosed prenatally through ] or ]. In ], between 1970 and 1984, 76% of the prenatally diagnosed ] with triple-X were aborted. Between 1985-1987, this figure dropped to 56%. With improved information, the number of ]s diminished. In the ], between 1991 and 2000, 33% (18/54) of the couples that were confronted with a prenatal diagnosis of 47,XXX elected to abort. If balanced information is provided to prospective parents, pre-natally, the incidence of voluntary termination (abortion) is reduced.<ref>written by Connie T.R.M. Schrander-Stumpel, MD, PhD, Professor of Clinical Genetics, Academic Hospital Maastricht, Netherlands. http://www.triple-x-syndroom.nl/document31/patient+care+article+triplexsyndrome+or+trisomy+x</ref> | |||
Impaired social regulation is more common in trisomy X, and is in part dependent on emotional dysregulation but also dependent on environmental factors.<ref name="Tallaksen2023"/> Girls growing up in stable environments with healthy home lives tend to have relatively high adaptive and social functioning, while significant behavioural and psychological issues are predominantly seen in those from troubled social environments.<ref name="ejhg1" /> Though girls with trisomy X usually have good relationships with peers, they trend towards immaturity;<ref name="dmcn" /> some behavioural issues in children with trisomy X are thought to be a consequence of the disconnect between apparent age, as understood via increased height, and cognitive and emotional maturity encouraging hard-to-reach expectations.<ref name="ejhg1" /> Girls whose motor and language skills are more severely affected by trisomy X often experience low confidence and self-esteem.<ref name="gdf7th">{{cite book|title=Genetic Disorders and the Fetus: Diagnosis, Prevention, and Treatment|veditors=Milunksy A, Milunsnky JM |author=Milunsky JM|year=2016|edition=7|publisher=John Wiley and Sons |location=Hoboken|chapter=Prenatal Diagnosis of Sex Chromosome Abnormalities|at=Triple X and poly-X syndromes}}</ref> These traits vary in severity; though some women with trisomy X are significantly impaired, many are within the normal range of variance, and some are high-functioning and high-achieving.<ref name="nelson" /> | |||
Some mental health issues are more frequent in women with trisomy X. ] and ], milder forms of depression and ] respectively, are more common than in the general population.<ref name="orphanet1" /><ref name="ejhg1" /> Women with trisomy X average higher ], reporting higher levels of introversion, ], and impulsivity.<ref name="dmcn" /> Around 30% are affected by thought problems and 13% have been diagnosed with psychotic or bipolar disorders.<ref name="van Rijn2019" /> Schizophrenic women are more likely to have trisomy X than the general female population.<ref name="bulletin">{{cite journal|title=Schizophrenia and sex chromosome anomalies|journal=Schizophrenia Bulletin|volume=20|issue=3|pages=495–505|date=1994|vauthors=DeLisi LE, Friedrich U, Wahlstrom J, Boccio-Smith A, Forsman A, Eklund K, Crow TJ|doi=10.1093/schbul/20.3.495|pmid=7973466|doi-access=free}}</ref> The prevalence of trisomy X in women with adult-onset ] is estimated to be around 1 in 400, compared to 1 in 1,000 in women as a whole; the prevalence in ] is unclear, but may be as high as 1 in 40.<ref name="mp">{{cite journal|title=Sex chromosome anomalies in childhood onset schizophrenia: an update|journal=Molecular Psychiatry|volume=13|issue=10|pages=910–911|date=18 September 2008|vauthors=Eckstrand K, Addington AM, Stromberg T, Merriman B, Miller R, Gochman P, Long R, Dutra A, Chen Z, Meltzer P, Nelson SF, Rapaport JL|doi=10.1038/mp.2008.67|pmid=18800051|pmc=4316819}}</ref> One in five women with trisomy X report clinically significant levels of anxiety. Estimates of the prevalence of clinical depression vary between 18 and 54%.<ref name="van Rijn2019" /> Women with trisomy X are often "late bloomers", experiencing high rates of psychological distress into early adulthood, but by their mid-thirties having stronger interpersonal bonds and healthy relationships.<ref name="dmcn" /> The study of mental health in trisomy X is complicated by the fact that girls and women who were diagnosed before birth seem to be more mildly affected than those diagnosed after. For instance, ] stomach pains are reported in a disproportionate number of postnatally diagnosed patients, but fewer prenatally diagnosed ones.<ref name="unique">{{cite web|url=https://www.rarechromo.org/media/information/Chromosome_X/Triple_X_syndrome%20Trisomy_X%20FTNW.pdf|title=Triple X syndrome, also called Trisomy X|work=Unique|vauthors=Unique, Hultén M, Scerif G|date=2021|access-date=10 May 2021}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
===Mosaic forms=== | |||
* ] | |||
The most common ] in trisomy X is 47,XXX, where all cells have an additional copy of the X chromosome. Mosaicism, where both 47,XXX and other cell lines are present, occurs in over 30% of cases.<ref name="Tallaksen2023">{{cite journal | vauthors = Tallaksen HB, Johannsen EB, Just J, Viuff MH, Gravholt CH, Skakkebæk A | title = The multi-omic landscape of sex chromosome abnormalities: current status and future directions | journal = Endocrine Connections | volume = 12 | issue = 9 | date = August 2023 | pmid = 37399516 | pmc = 10448593 | doi = 10.1530/EC-23-0011 }}</ref> Mosaic trisomy X can have different outcomes to the non-mosaic condition and further contributes to the variability seen in Trisomy X.<ref name="Rogol2023"/> Common mosaic forms observed include 46,XX/47,XXX, 45,X/47,XXX (with a ] cell line), and 47,XXX/48,XXXX (with a ] cell line). Complex mosaicism, with cell lines such as 45,X/46,XX/47,XXX, can also be seen.<ref name="orphanet1" /> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
====46,XX/47,XXX==== | |||
* ] | |||
The simplest form of mosaic trisomy X, with a 46,XX/47,XXX karyotype, is milder compared to full trisomy X. There is still an increased occurrence of birth defects, as well as skin and urogenital disorders.<ref name="Tallaksen2023"/> Cognitive development is more typical, with improved long-term life outcomes.<ref name="gdf7th"/> Although generally milder, 46,XX/47,XXX mosaicism is associated with a higher risk of chromosome anomalies in offspring than full trisomy X.<ref name="gdf7th"/> The increased risk of abnormal offspring in mosaicism has been hypothesized to be a consequence of ] abnormality in 46,XX/47,XXX women not seen in full 47,XXX. Some writers have recommended women with 46,XX/47,XXX karyotypes undergo screening for chromosomal disorders during pregnancy.<ref name="orphanet1" /><ref name="ajmg7">{{cite journal|title=A possible explanation for the low incidence of gonosomal aneuploidy among the offspring of triplo-X individuals|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics|volume=18|issue=2|pages=357–364|date=1984|vauthors=Neri G, Opitz JM|doi=10.1002/ajmg.1320180220|pmid=6465205}}</ref> | |||
====45,X/47,XXX==== | |||
] | |||
Around 5% of females with ], defined by a karyotype with a single copy of the X chromosome, have a 47,XXX cell line.<ref name="Rogol2023"/> Mosaic karyotypes with both 45,X and 47,XXX cells are considered Turner syndrome rather than trisomy X, but the presence of 47,XXX cells influences the disorder,<ref name="mggm">{{cite journal|title=Ovarian reserve evaluation in a woman with 45,X/47,XXX mosaicism: A case report and a review of literature|journal=Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine|volume=7|issue=7|pages=e00732|date=July 2019|vauthors=Tang R, Lin L, Guo Z, Hou H, Yu Q|doi=10.1002/mgg3.732|pmid=31070017|pmc=6625135}}</ref> with milder effects than non-mosaic Turner syndrome. Most are still affected by short stature and early premature ovarian failure (before age 30) is common, but a majority reach puberty and menarche spontaneously.<ref name="Rogol2023"/> Almost all women with regular Turner syndrome are sterile, but those with 47,XXX cell lines are typically fertile.<ref>{{cite book|title=Genetic Disorders and the Fetus: Diagnosis, Prevention, and Treatment|veditors=Milunksy A, Milunsnky JM |author=Milunsky JM|year=2016|edition=7|publisher=John Wiley and Sons |location=Hoboken|chapter=Prenatal Diagnosis of Sex Chromosome Abnormalities|at=Turner syndrome}}</ref> Although women with trisomy X have lower IQs than the general population and women with Turner syndrome do not, intellectual disability does not appear to be more common in the mosaic than for non-mosaic Turner's.<ref name="jmg">{{cite journal|title=Phenotypic effects of mosaicism for a 47,XXX cell line in Turner syndrome|journal=Journal of Medical Genetics|volume=39|issue=3|pages=217–220|date=March 2002|vauthors=Sybert VP|doi=10.1136/jmg.39.3.217|pmid=11897829|pmc=1735059}}</ref> Women with mosaic Turner syndrome tend to have similar dysmorphic features to those with non-mosaic Turner's syndrome, but less marked, and some have none of the traditional visible Turner traits.<ref name="jop">{{cite journal|title=Phenotype, ovarian function, and growth in patients with 45,X/47,XXX Turner mosaicism: Implications for prenatal counseling and estrogen therapy at puberty|journal=Journal of Pediatrics|volume=139|issue=5|pages=724–728|date=November 2001|vauthors=Blair J, Tolmie J, Hollman AS, ((Donaldson MDC))|doi=10.1067/mpd.2001.118571|pmid=11713453}}</ref> | |||
====47,XXX/48,XXXX==== | |||
Mosaicism with a ] cell line generally appears more severe than typical trisomy X.<ref name="gdf7th"/> Like trisomy X, tetrasomy X has a variable phenotype muddled by underdiagnosis. The tetrasomy is generally more severe than the trisomy; intellectual disability is characteristic, dysmorphic features more visible, and puberty often altered.<ref name="orphanet1" /><ref name="gdf7th"/> | |||
==Causes== | |||
{{multiple image | |||
|direction=vertical | |||
|image1=XXX syndrome (female).svg | |||
|alt1=Egg cells dividing, one ending up with an extra copy of the X chromosome, producing a zygote with an extra X | |||
|image2=XXX syndrome (male).svg | |||
|alt2=Sperm cells dividing, one ending up with an extra copy of the X chromosome, producing a zygote with an extra X | |||
|footer=Maternal (top) and paternal (bottom) nondisjunction leading to trisomy X<ref name="ajhg2">{{cite journal|title=The parental origin of the extra X chromosome in 47,XXX females|journal=American Journal of Human Genetics|volume=46|issue=4|pages=754–761|date=April 1990|vauthors=May KM, Jacobs PA, Lee M, Ratcliffe S, Robinson A, Nielsen J, Hassold TJ|pmid=2316522|pmc=1683670}}</ref><ref name="statpearls">{{cite journal|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK482240/|title=Genetics, Nondisjunction|journal=NCBI Bookshelf|vauthors=Gottlieb SF, Tupper C, Kerndt CC, Tegay DH|date=26 September 2020|pmid=29489267|access-date=21 June 2021}}</ref>}} | |||
Trisomy X, like other ] disorders, is caused by a process called ]. Nondisjunction occurs when ]s or ]s fail to separate properly during ], the process that produces ]s (eggs or sperm), and result in gametes with too many or too few chromosomes.<ref name="mb">{{cite journal|title=Mechanisms of oocyte aneuploidy associated with advanced maternal age|journal=Mutation Research/Reviews in Mutation Research|volume=785|date=4 July 2020|vauthors=Mikwar M, MacFarlane AJ, Marchetti F|page=108320|doi=10.1016/j.mrrev.2020.108320|pmid=32800274|doi-access=|bibcode=2020MRRMR.78508320M |s2cid=221142882 }}</ref> Nondisjunction can occur during ], where the trisomy is present from conception, or ] development, where it occurs after conception.<ref name="orphanet1" /> When nondisjunction occurs after conception, the resulting karyotype is generally ], with both 47,XXX and other cell lines.<ref name="hru">{{cite journal|title=Meiotic and mitotic nondisjunction: lessons from preimplantation genetic diagnosis|journal=Human Reproduction Update|volume=10|issue=5|pages=401–407|date=1 October 2004|vauthors=Kuliev A, Verlinsky Y|doi=10.1093/humupd/dmh036|pmid=15319376|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
Most cases of trisomy X occur through maternal nondisjunction, with around 90% of cases traced to errors in ].<ref name="gdf7th"/> The vast majority of cases of trisomy X occur randomly; they have nothing to do with the chromosomes of the parents and little chance of recurring in the family.<ref name="unique" /> Nondisjunction is related to ], and trisomy X specifically appears to have a small but significant maternal age effect.<ref name="orphanet1" /> In a cohort of women with trisomy X born in the 1960s, the average maternal age was 33.<ref name="ejhg1"/> The risk of women with full trisomy X having chromosomally abnormal children is low, likely below 1%. Recurrence may occur if the mother has mosaicism for trisomy X, particularly in ovarian cells, but this makes up a small fraction of cases.<ref name="unique" /> | |||
Proposed mechanisms behind the phenotype of Trisomy X include incomplete ], and corresponding changes to ] and ] across the entire genome.<ref name="Tallaksen2023"/> X-inactivation is never total and around 15% of genes on the second X chromosome are only partially deactivated, but it is unknown to what extent genes on the third chromosome escape inactivation.<ref name="Green2019"/> With respect to specific genes increased copy numbers of the X-chromosomal ] gene has been linked to increased height.<ref name="Tallaksen2023"/> | |||
==Diagnosis and differential diagnosis== | |||
Chromosome ] such as trisomy X are diagnosed via ],<ref name="natureed">{{cite web|url=https://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/chromosomal-abnormalities-aneuploidies-290/|title=Chromosomal abnormalities: aneuploidies|work=Nature Education|vauthors=O'Connor C|date=2008|access-date=16 May 2021|archive-date=3 November 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103224725/https://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/chromosomal-abnormalities-aneuploidies-290/|url-status=live}}</ref> the process in which chromosomes are tested from blood, bone marrow, ], or placental cells.<ref name="medline">{{cite web|url=https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/003935.htm|title=Karyotyping|work=MedlinePlus|vauthors=Edens Hurst AC, Zieve D, Conaway B|date=2 April 2021|access-date=16 May 2021}}</ref> As trisomy X is generally mild or asymptomatic, most cases are never diagnosed. Around 10% of cases of trisomy X are diagnosed in the person's lifetime; many are ascertained coincidentally during prenatal testing via ] or ], which is routinely performed for ].<ref name="orphanet1" /> Postnatal testing is typically prompted by ],<ref name="cpr">{{cite journal|title=Tall stature: a difficult diagnosis?|journal=Italian Journal of Pediatrics|volume=43|issue=1|date=3 August 2017|vauthors=Meazza C, Gertosio C, Giacchero R, Pagani S, Bozzola M|page=66|doi=10.1186/s13052-017-0385-5|pmid=28774346|pmc=5543750 |doi-access=free }}</ref> ], developmental disability, mild dysmorphic features such as ] or ], and ].<ref name="orphanet1" /> | |||
] | |||
], characterized by four copies of the X chromosome, has some signs in common with more severe cases of trisomy X. ], generally mild, is more frequently seen in the tetrasomy than the trisomy. There is more of a tendency towards noticeable dysmorphic features such as hypertelorism, clinodactyly, and ]. Unlike trisomy X, approximately half of women with tetrasomy X have no or incomplete pubertal development. Although in most cases tetrasomy X is significantly more severe than trisomy X, some cases of tetrasomy X are mild, and some cases of trisomy X severe. Like trisomy X, the full phenotypic range of tetrasomy X is unknown due to underdiagnosis.<ref name="nord" /><ref name="uniquetetra">{{cite web|url=https://www.rarechromo.org/media/information/Chromosome_X/Tetrasomy_X%20FTNW.pdf|title=Tetrasomy X|work=Unique|vauthors=Unique, Rooman R, Hultén M|date=2005|access-date=16 May 2021|archive-date=18 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210318195853/https://www.rarechromo.org/media/information/Chromosome_X/Tetrasomy_X%20FTNW.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> ], with five X chromosomes, may rarely be a differential diagnosis for trisomy X. The phenotype of pentasomy X is more severe than the trisomy or tetrasomy, with significant intellectual disability, heart defects, ], and ].<ref name="nord" /> | |||
Due to overlapping dysmorphic features, such as epicanthic folds and upslanting ]s, some cases of trisomy X may be ascertained due to suspicion of ].<ref name="orphanet1" /> When the primary symptom is tall stature, trisomy X may be considered alongside other conditions depending on the rest of the phenotype. ] may be considered due to the disproportion between limb and torso length observed in both syndromes, as well as both experiencing joint issues. ], another disproportionate tall stature syndrome, can cause developmental disability similar to that seen in some cases of trisomy X.<ref name="cpr" /> | |||
As karyotypic diagnosis is conclusive, differential diagnosis can be abandoned after karyotype in most cases of trisomy X. However, due to the relatively high prevalence of trisomy X, other congenital disorders may occur alongside a 47,XXX karyotype. Differential diagnosis remains indicated when the phenotype is particularly severe for what a 47,XXX karyotype alone explains, such as severe intellectual disability or significant malformation.<ref name="orphanet1" /> | |||
==Prognosis== | |||
{{quote box|quote="My doctor told us that if our unborn daughter had to have a genetic issue, Trisomy X is the one to have, so to speak. He said that many girls with this condition are completely normal, and that it is not physically noticeable. The issues that we could have might be with speech and motor delays, or learning disabilities. The doctor did have us speak with a genetic counselor, but no one encouraged us to terminate and we did not consider it."|author=Parent of a daughter with trisomy X<ref name="livingwith" />|width=30%}} | |||
The prognosis of trisomy X is broadly good, with adult independence most often achieved, if delayed. Most adults achieve normal life outcomes, pursuing education, employment, or homemaking.<ref name="livingwith">{{cite book|title=Living with Klinefelter Syndrome (47,XXY) Trisomy X (47, XXX) and 47, XYY: A Guide for Families and Individuals Affected by Extra X and Y Chromosome Variations|chapter=Trisomy X, Tetrasomy X and Pentasomy X|pages=107–114| vauthors = Cover VI |date=2012|publisher=Friesens|location=Altona, Manitoba|isbn=978-0615574004}}</ref> Childhood and adolescence, particularly in compulsory education, tends to be more difficult for those with trisomy X than adult life. Parents report their daughters' struggling both academically and socially at school,<ref name="ijer">{{cite journal|title=Triple X supergirls: Their special educational needs and social experience|journal=International Journal of Educational Research|volume=102|issue=1|date=25 May 2020|vauthors=Attfield K|page=101588|doi=10.1016/j.ijer.2020.101588| s2cid=219811098 }}</ref> particularly during ],<ref name="livingwith" /> while adults report better adaptation after leaving education and entering the workforce.<ref name="ejhg1" /> Of the women in the cohort studies followed to early adulthood, 7 of 37 dropped out of high school, while three attended university.<ref name="ejhg1" /> Compared to age-matched women in the general population, women with trisomy X are 68% as likely to live with a partner, 64% as likely to have children, 36% as likely to hold higher education qualifications, and almost twice as likely to be retired from the workforce.<ref name="ajmg8" /> | |||
Physical health is generally good and many women with trisomy X live into old age.<ref name="unique" /> Little data exists on aging in trisomy X.<ref name="ejhg1" /> Data from the Danish Cytogenetic Central Register, which covers 13% of women with trisomy X in Denmark,<ref name="orphanet3">{{cite journal|title=Changes in the cohort composition of Turner syndrome and severe non-diagnosis of Klinefelter, 47,XXX and 47,XYY syndrome: a nationwide cohort study|journal=Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases|volume=14|issue=1|date=2019|vauthors=Berglund A, Viuff MN, ((Skakkebæk A)), Chang S, Stochholm K, Gravholt CH|page=16|pmc=6332849|doi=10.1186/s13023-018-0976-2|pmid=30642344|doi-access=free}}</ref> suggests a life expectancy of 71 for women with full trisomy X and 78 for mosaics, compared to 84 for controls.<ref name="ajmg6">{{cite journal|title=Mortality and incidence in women with 47,XXX and variants|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A|volume=152A|issue=2|pages=367–372|date=2010|vauthors=Stochholm K, Juul S, Gravholt CH|doi=10.1002/ajmg.a.33214|pmid=20101696|s2cid=12004487}}</ref> The limited sample, composed only of women with trisomy X who have come to medical attention, has led to speculation this number is an underestimate.<ref name="ajmg8" /> | |||
Women with trisomy X who were diagnosed prenatally have better outcomes as a group than those diagnosed postnatally, and 46,XX/47,XXX mosaics better than those with full trisomy X.<ref name="orphanet1" /> Some of the improved outcome in prenatal diagnosis appears to be a function of higher socioeconomic status amongst parents.<ref name="ejhg1" /> | |||
==Epidemiology== | |||
Trisomy X is a relatively common genetic disorder, occurring in around 1 in 1,000 female births. Due to its subtle effects, at most 10% of cases are diagnosed during their lifetime.{{sfn|Skuse, Printzlau & Wolstencroft|2018|pp=355, 362}} Large ] studies in Denmark find a diagnosed prevalence of 6 in 100,000 females, around 7% of the actual number of girls and women with trisomy X expected to exist in the general population.<ref name="orphanet3" /> Diagnosis in the United Kingdom is particularly low, with an estimated 2% of cases medically recognized.<ref name="ajmg8">{{cite journal|title=The epidemiology of sex chromosome abnormalities|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics|date=2020|vauthors=Berglund A, Stochholm K, Gravholt CH|volume=184|issue=2|pages=202–215|doi=10.1002/ajmg.c.31805|pmid=32506765|s2cid=219537282}}</ref> Amongst the 244,000 women in the ] research sample, 110 were found to have 47,XXX karyotypes, corresponding to approximately half the number expected in the population. The fact this number is still reduced compared to the broader population is thought to be an effect of UK Biobank participants being less likely to be of low IQ and low socioeconomic status than the general population, both of which are more frequent in trisomy X.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Mosaic Turner syndrome shows reduced penetrance in an adult population study|journal=Genetics in Medicine|volume=21|issue=4|pages=877–886|date=2019|vauthors=Tuke MA, Ruth KS, Wood AR, Beaumont RN, Tyrrell J, Jones SE, Yaghootkar H, ((Turner CLS)), Donohoe ME, Brooke AM, Collinson MN, Freathy RM, Weedon MN, Frayling TM, Murray A|doi=10.1038/s41436-018-0271-6|pmid=30181606|pmc=6752315}}</ref> | |||
Trisomy X only occurs in females, as the ] is in most cases necessary for male sexual development.<ref name="unique" />{{NoteTag|Male phenotypes, innate or induced, with forms of X chromosome polysomy that are usually phenotypically female do occur. For trisomy X, a ] and several men with ] have been recorded.<ref name="biopsych">{{cite journal|title=Female-to-male transsexual with 47,XXX karyotype|journal=Biological Psychiatry|volume=48|issue=1|pages=1116–1117|date=1 December 2000|vauthors=Turan MT, Eşel E, Dündar M, Candemir Z, Baştürk M, Sofuoğlu S, Özkul Y|doi=10.1016/S0006-3223(00)00954-9|pmid=11094147|s2cid=16396520}}</ref><ref name="ajmgtrisomy">{{cite journal|title=47,XXX male: A clinical and molecular study|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics|volume=98|issue=4|pages=353–356|date=1 February 2001|vauthors=Ogata T, Matsuo M, Muroya K, Koyama Y, Fukutani K|doi=10.1002/1096-8628(20010201)98:4<353::AID-AJMG1110>3.0.CO;2-D|pmid=11170081}}</ref><ref name="ajmgtrisomy2">{{cite journal|title=Y-specific DNA sequences in male patients with 46,XX and 47,XXX karyotypes|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics|volume=28|issue=2|pages=393–401|date=October 1987|vauthors=Müller U, Latt SA, Donlon T, Opitz JM|doi=10.1002/ajmg.1320280218|pmid=2827475}}</ref>}} In addition to its high ], trisomy X is more common in some clinical subpopulations. The karyotype occurs in an estimated 3% of women with early menopause,<ref>{{cite journal|title=Genetic aspects of premature ovarian failure: a literature review|journal=Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics|volume=283|issue=3|pages=635–643|date=2011|vauthors=Cordts EB, Christofolini DM, dos Santos AA, Bianco B, Barbosa CP|doi=10.1007/s00404-010-1815-4|pmid=21188402|s2cid=10472263}}</ref> 1 in 350 with ], and 1 in 400 with ].<ref name="ar" /> | |||
{{gallery | |||
|title=Rate and age of diagnosis | |||
|align=center | |||
|width=260 | |||
|height=210 | |||
|File:SCA expected and observed prevalence in Denmark - cropped to TS and TX.png | |||
|alt1=Diagnosis chart showing only a small percentage of women with trisomy X are diagnosed | |||
|Expected and observed number of people diagnosed with trisomy X and ] in Denmark | |||
|File:KS-TX-YY age at diagnosis.png | |||
|alt2=Age at diagnosis chart, showing diagnosis for trisomy X peaks before birth, in early-mid childhood, and in mid-adulthood | |||
|]s of age at diagnosis for ], trisomy X, and ] | |||
}} | |||
==History== | |||
The first known case of trisomy X, in a {{height|cm=176}} woman who experienced ] at the age of 19, was diagnosed in 1959 by a team led by ].<ref name="ejhg1"/><ref name="lancet1">{{cite journal|vauthors=Jacobs PA, Baikie AG, Court Brown WM, MacGregor TN, Harnden DG|date=26 September 1959 |title=Evidence for the existence of the human 'super female' |journal=] |volume=274 |issue=7100 |pages=423–425 |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(59)90415-5 |pmid=14406377}}</ref> The late 1950s and early 1960s were a period of frequent ascertainment of previously unknown sex chromosome aneuploidies, with the 47,XXX karyotype discovered alongside ] and ] the same year.<ref name="ejhg1"/><ref name="lancet2">{{cite journal|vauthors=Ford CE, Jones KW, Polani PE, ((de Almeida JCC)), Briggs JH|title=A sex-chromosome anomaly in a case of gonadal dysgenesis (Turner's syndrome)|journal=]|volume=273|issue=7075|pages=711–713|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(59)91893-8|pmid=13642858|date=1959}}</ref><ref name="nature">{{cite journal|vauthors=Jacobs PA, Strong JA|date=31 January 1959 |title=A case of human intersexuality having a possible XXY sex-determining mechanism |journal=] |volume=183 |issue=4657 |pages=302–303 |doi= 10.1038/183302a0 |pmid=13632697|bibcode=1959Natur.183..302J |s2cid=38349997}}</ref> Early studies on sex chromosome aneuploidy screened patients residing in institutions, depicting the karyotypes as incapacitating; even at the time, this research was criticized for giving an inaccurate portrait of sex chromosome aneuploidy.<ref name="cmaj">{{cite journal|title=The triplo-X female: an appraisal based on a study of 12 cases and a review of the literature|journal=Canadian Medical Association Journal|volume=101|issue=5|pages=247–258|date=6 September 1969|vauthors=Barr ML, Sergovich FR, Carr DH, Saver EL|pmid=5812107|pmc=1946229}}</ref> Early reports of women with trisomy X have since been criticized for a dehumanizing ] perspective, showing nude photographs of institutionalized women described as "mental deficiency patients".<ref name="joeaw">{{cite journal|title=Triple X superwomen: their post-compulsory education and employability|journal=Journal of Education and Work|volume=34|issue=1|pages=81–94|date=25 January 2021|vauthors=Attfield K|doi=10.1080/13639080.2021.1875126|s2cid=231990866|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
In response to the biased early studies, a ] program for sex chromosome aneuploidy disorders was implemented in the 1960s.<ref name="adc">{{cite journal|title=Long term outcome in children of sex chromosome abnormalities|journal=Archives of Disease in Childhood|volume=80|issue=2|pages=192–195|date=1999|vauthors=Ratcliffe S|doi=10.1136/adc.80.2.192|pmid=10325742|pmc=1717826}}</ref> Almost 200,000 neonates were screened in ], ], ], ], ], and ]; those found to have sex chromosome aneuploidies were followed up for 20 years for most of the cohorts, and longer for the Edinburgh and Denver cohorts.<ref name="ejhg1" /> The children with trisomy X and Klinefelter's had their karyotypes disclosed to their parents, but due to the then-present perception that ] was associated with violent criminality, those diagnoses were hidden from the family.<ref name="adc" /> | |||
These studies dispelled the idea that sex chromosome aneuploidies were "tantamount to a life of serious handicaps" and revealed their high prevalence in the population.<ref name="jsh">{{cite journal|title=Sex chromosome variations in school-age children|journal=Journal of School Health|volume=55|issue=3|pages=99–102|date=March 1985|vauthors=Cohen FL, Durham JD|doi=10.1111/j.1746-1561.1985.tb04089.x|pmid=3845264}}</ref> They provided extensive information on the outcomes of trisomy X and other sex chromosome aneuploidies, forming much of the medical literature on the topic to this day. However, the small sample sizes of the long-term follow-ups in particular stymies extrapolation; by 1999, only 16 women in Edinburgh were still being followed.<ref name="unique" /> In 2007, ] founded the eXtraordinarY Kids Clinic in Denver to study children with sex chromosome aneuploidies; around one-fifth of patients at the clinic had trisomy X {{as of|2015|lc=y}}.<ref name="xyclinic" /> Several centers modeled on the clinic have since opened across the US.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Gravholt |first1=Claus H. |last2=Tartaglia |first2=Nicole |last3=Disteche |first3=Christine |date=June 2020 |title=Sex chromosome aneuploidies in 2020—The state of care and research in the world |journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics |volume=184 |issue=2 |pages=197–201 |doi=10.1002/ajmg.c.31808 |issn=1552-4868 |pmc=7419158 |pmid=32496026}}</ref> In 2020, she introduced the eXtraordinarY Babies Study, a planned cohort study on people prenatally diagnosed with sex chromosome aneuploidies.<ref name="Tartaglia2020"/> | |||
The first description of trisomy X used the term 'superfemale' to describe the karyotype by analogy to '']'' flies, a term that was immediately disputed. ] proposed the use of 'metafemale', which Jacobs criticized as both medically inaccurate and an "illegitimate product of a Graeco-Roman alliance". Bernard Lennon, opposing the use of 'superfemale' as misleading and possessed of an inappropriate "emotional element", suggested 'XXX syndrome'.<ref name="lancet3">{{cite journal|title=Use of the term "superfemale"|journal=The Lancet|volume=274|issue=7112|page=1145|date=19 December 1959|vauthors=Jacobs PA, Baikie AG, Court Brown WM, Harnden DG, MacGregor TN, MacLean N|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(59)90132-1}}</ref><ref name="lancet4">{{cite journal|title=Use of the term "superfemale"|journal=The Lancet|volume=275|issue=7114|page=55|date=2 January 1960|vauthors=Lennox B|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(60)92744-6}}</ref> For some years, the disorder was predominantly known as 'triple X syndrome' or 'triple X', though the latter is now discouraged.<ref name="unique" /> In 2022 Trisomy X was included alongside XYY at the 3rd International Workshop on Klinefelter Syndrome, which concluded that the body of research was insufficient to formulate robust guidelines for Trisomy X.<ref name="Gravholt2023">{{cite journal | vauthors = Gravholt CH, Ferlin A, Gromoll J, Juul A, Raznahan A, van Rijn S, Rogol AD, Skakkebæk A, Tartaglia N, Swaab H | title = New developments and future trajectories in supernumerary sex chromosome abnormalities: a summary of the 2022 3rd International Workshop on Klinefelter Syndrome, Trisomy X, and XYY | journal = Endocrine Connections | volume = 12 | issue = 3 | date = March 2023 | pmid = 36598290 | pmc = 9986408 | doi = 10.1530/EC-22-0500 }}</ref> | |||
==Society and culture== | |||
Awareness and diagnosis of sex chromosome aneuploidies is increasing.<ref name="gdf7th-Intro">{{cite book|title=Genetic Disorders and the Fetus: Diagnosis, Prevention, and Treatment|veditors=Milunksy A, Milunsnky JM |author=Milunsky JM|year=2016|edition=7|publisher=John Wiley and Sons |location=Hoboken|chapter=Prenatal Diagnosis of Sex Chromosome Abnormalities|at=Chapter introduction}}</ref> In the late 2010s, several state governments across the United States declared May to be National X & Y Chromosome Variation Awareness Month.<ref name="month">{{cite web|url=https://genetic.org/national-x-y-chromosome-variation-awareness-month/|title=National X & Y Chromosome Variation Awareness Month|work=AXYS: Association for X and Y Chromosome Variations|access-date=23 May 2021}}</ref> | |||
Descriptions of trisomy X overwhelmingly consider the karyotype from a medical perspective, rather than a sociological or educational one.<ref name="ijer" /> One topic in the sociological discussion of trisomy X and other sex chromosome aneuploidies is ]. Fetuses with sex chromosome aneuploidies are more likely to be aborted, though fetuses with trisomy X are less likely than for such conditions as a whole. A literature review of 19 studies found that nearly one-third of pregnancies with a child with trisomy X were aborted; it also found that parents who were counselled by a ] with expertise in sex chromosome aneuploidies, rather than an ] or ], were less likely to abort.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Decision to abort after a prenatal diagnosis of sex chromosome abnormality: a systematic review of the literature|journal=Genetics in Medicine|volume=14|issue=1|pages=27–38|date=7 October 2011|vauthors=Jeon KC, Chen LS, Goodson P|doi=10.1038/gim.0b013e31822e57a7|pmid=22237429|doi-access=free}}</ref> Abortion rates in sex chromosome aneuploidies have decreased over time with improved counselling.<ref name="og2">{{cite journal|title=Intrauterine diagnosis of sex chromosome aneuploidy|journal=Obstetrics & Gynecology|volume=87|issue=3|pages=468–475|date=March 1996|vauthors=Linden MG, Bender BG, Robinson A|doi=10.1016/0029-7844(95)00419-x|pmid=8598978|s2cid=32257832}}</ref><ref name="pd">{{cite journal|title=Pregnancy outcomes in prenatally diagnosed 47, XXX and 47, XYY syndromes: a 30-year French, retrospective, multicentre study|journal=Prenatal Diagnosis|volume=36|issue=6|pages=523–529|date=28 March 2016|vauthors=Gruchy N, Blondeel E, Le Meur N, Joly-Hélas G, Chambon P, Till M, Herbeaux M, Vigouroux-Castera A, Coussement A, Lespinasse J, Amblard F, Jiminez Pocquet M, Lebel-Roy C, Carré-Pigeon F, Flori E, Mugneret F, Jaillard S, Yardin C, Harbuz R, Collonge-Rame MA, Vago P, Valduga M, Leporrier N, Vialard F|doi=10.1002/pd.4817|pmid=27018091|s2cid=29814110}}</ref> | |||
==In other animals== | |||
Trisomy X has been observed in other species that use the ]. Six cases of trisomy X have been recorded in dogs, for which the ] is 79,XXX compared to 78,XX for an ] female dog.<ref name="animals">{{cite journal|title=Clinical cytogenetics of the dog: a review|journal=Animals|volume=11|issue=4|page=947|date=27 March 2021|vauthors=Szczerbal I, Switonski M|doi=10.3390/ani11040947|pmid=33801756|pmc=8066086|doi-access=free}}</ref> Unlike in humans, trisomy X in dogs is strongly linked to infertility, either primary ] or infertility with an otherwise normal ]. Canine trisomy X is thought to be underascertained, as most pet dogs are ] and so underlying infertility will not be discovered.<ref name="theriogenology1">{{cite journal|title=Trisomy-X with estrous cycle anomalies in two female dogs|journal=Theriogenology|volume=76|issue=2|pages=374–380|date=15 July 2011|vauthors=O'Connor CL, Schweizer C, Gradil C, Schlafer D, Lopate C, Prociuk U, Meyers-Wallen VN, Casal ML|doi=10.1016/j.theriogenology.2011.02.017|pmid=21550105|pmc=3115384}}</ref> Three of the six known cases of canine trisomy X demonstrated behavioural issues such as fearfulness, inciting speculation about a link between the karyotype and psychological concerns as seen in humans with the condition. An additional dog with normal fertility and no reported behavioural issues was found to have a mosaic 78,XX/79,XXX karyotype. The canine X chromosome has a particularly large ], and dogs accordingly have a lower rate of ] than observed in other species; however, a large pseudoautosomal region is not considered a contraindication for trisomy X, and canine trisomy X may have a comparable prevalence to the human form.<ref name="animals" /> | |||
Trisomy X is also observed in cattle, where it corresponds to a 61,XXX karyotype. A survey of 71 ]s who failed to become pregnant after two breeding seasons found two cases of trisomy X.<ref name="joh">{{cite journal|title=Chromosome abnormalities as a cause of reproductive inefficiency in heifers|journal=Journal of Heredity|volume=74|issue=5|pages=320–324|date=September 1983|vauthors=Swartz HA, Vogt DW|doi=10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a109802}}</ref> As of 2021 a total of eight heifers with Trisomy X have been identified, seven of them were infertile. The condition also affect the ] where the three known cases were sterile.<ref name="vr">{{cite journal|title=Chromosome Abnormalities and Fertility in Domestic Bovids: A Review|volume=11|issue=3|date=12 March 2021|vauthors=Iannuzzi A, Parma P, Iannuzzi L| journal=Animals | page=802 |doi=10.3390/ani11030802| pmc=8001068 |pmid=33809390|hdl=2434/822898|hdl-access=free| doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{NoteFoot}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
== Book sources == | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Skuse |first1=David |chapter=Sex chromosome aneuploidies |date=2018 |title=Handbook of Clinical Neurology |volume=147 |pages=355–376 |editor-last=Geschwind |editor-first=Daniel H. |chapter-url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780444632333000245 |series=Neurogenetics, Part I |publisher=Elsevier |doi=10.1016/b978-0-444-63233-3.00024-5 |last2=Printzlau |first2=Frida |last3=Wolstencroft |first3=Jeanne |isbn=978-0-444-63233-3 |editor2-last=Paulson |editor2-first=Henry L. |editor3-last=Klein |editor3-first=Christine |ref=CITEREFSkuse, Printzlau & Wolstencroft2018}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Messer |first1=K |chapter=Trisomy X Syndrome (47,XXX) |date=2013 |title=Brenner's Encyclopedia of Genetics |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/B9780123749840017009 |publisher=Elsevier |doi=10.1016/b978-0-12-374984-0.01700-9 |isbn=978-0-08-096156-9 |last2=D'Epagnier |first2=C |last3=Howell |first3=S |last4=Tartaglia |first4=N |pages=195−197 |ref=CITEREFMesser2013}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Commons category}} | |||
* ] (2007). Genetics Home Reference | |||
* ] |
* ] (2008). Genetics Home Reference | ||
* Nielsen, Johannes (1998). . The Turner Center, ] Psychiatric Hospital, ], ]. | |||
{{Medical resources | |||
** Triple X information booklet by Dr. Nielsen, a psychiatrist and geneticist who led the longest running of 8 international newborn screening studies of sex chromosome abnormalities. | |||
| ICD11 = {{ICD11|LD50.1}} | |||
| ICD10 = {{ICD10|Q97.0}} | |||
| ICD10CM = <!-- {{ICD10CM|Xxx.xxxx}} --> | |||
| ICD9 = {{ICD9|758.81}} | |||
| ICDO = | |||
| OMIM = | |||
| MeshID = C535318 | |||
| DiseasesDB = 13386 | |||
| SNOMED CT = 35111009 | |||
| Curlie = | |||
| MedlinePlus = | |||
| eMedicineSubj = | |||
| eMedicineTopic = | |||
| PatientUK = | |||
| NCI = | |||
| GeneReviewsNBK = | |||
| GeneReviewsName = | |||
| NORD = Trisomy X | |||
| GARDNum = 5672 | |||
| GARDName = Trisomy X | |||
| RP = 178767 | |||
| AO = | |||
| WO = | |||
| OrthoInfo = | |||
| Orphanet = | |||
| Scholia = Q510912 | |||
| OB = | |||
}} | |||
{{Chromosomal abnormalities}} | {{Chromosomal abnormalities}} |
Latest revision as of 10:34, 2 January 2025
Chromosome disorder in womenMedical condition
Trisomy X | |
---|---|
Other names | 47,XXX, triple X syndrome, triplo-X syndrome, XXX syndrome |
Three individuals with trisomy X | |
Specialty | Medical genetics |
Symptoms | Tall stature, skeletal anomalies, minor neurocognitive and behavioural difficulties |
Usual onset | Conception |
Duration | Lifelong |
Causes | Nondisjunction |
Diagnostic method | Karyotype |
Frequency | approximately 1 in 1,000 (female) |
Trisomy X, also known as triple X syndrome and characterized by the karyotype 47,XXX, is a chromosome disorder in which a female has an extra copy of the X chromosome. It is relatively common and occurs in 1 in 1,000 females, but is rarely diagnosed; fewer than 10% of those with the condition know they have it.
Those who have symptoms can have learning disabilities, mild dysmorphic features such as hypertelorism (wide-spaced eyes) and clinodactyly (incurved little fingers), early menopause, and increased height. As the symptoms of trisomy X are often not serious enough to prompt a karyotype test, many cases of trisomy X are diagnosed before birth via prenatal screening tests such as amniocentesis. Research on females with the disorder finds that cases which were diagnosed postnatally, having been referred for testing because of obvious symptoms, are generally more severe than those diagnosed prenatally. Most females with trisomy X live normal lives, although their socioeconomic status is reduced compared to the general population.
Trisomy X occurs via a process called nondisjunction, in which normal cell division is interrupted and produces gametes with too many or too few chromosomes. Nondisjunction is a random occurrence, and most girls and women with trisomy X have no family histories of chromosome aneuploidy. Advanced maternal age is mildly associated with trisomy X. Women with trisomy X can have children of their own, who in most cases do not have an increased risk of chromosome disorders; women with mosaic trisomy X, who have a mix of 46,XX (the typical female karyotype) and 47,XXX cells, may have an increased risk of chromosomally abnormal children.
First reported in 1959 by the geneticist Patricia Jacobs, the early understanding of trisomy X was that of a debilitating disability observed in institutionalized women. Beginning in the 1960s, studies of people with sex chromosome aneuploidies from birth to adulthood found that they are often only mildly affected, fitting in with the general population, and that many never needed the attention of clinicians because of the condition.
Presentation
Trisomy X has variable effects, ranging from no symptoms at all to significant disability. Severity varies between people diagnosed prenatally (before birth) and postnatally (after birth), and postnatal cases are more severe on average. Symptoms associated with trisomy X include tall stature, mild developmental delay, subtle physical and skeletal anomalies, increased rates of mental health concerns, and earlier age of menopause.
Physiological
The physical and physiological impacts of trisomy X tend to be subtle. Tall stature is one of the major physical associations of trisomy X. Prior to age four, most young females with trisomy X are average height; growth picks up after this age, and is particularly rapid between the ages of four and eight. Of girls with trisomy X aged six to thirteen, 40% are above the 90th percentile in height. The added height in trisomy X is primarily in the limbs, with long legs and a shorter sitting height. Though head circumference is generally below the 50th percentile, microcephaly, a head circumference below the 5th percentile, is rare.
Minor skeletal and craniofacial anomalies are associated with trisomy X. Subtle dysmorphisms seen in some females with trisomy X include hypertelorism (wide-spaced eyes), epicanthic folds (an additional fold of skin in the corners of the eyes), and upslanting palpebral fissures (the opening between the eyelids). These differences are usually minor and do not impact the daily lives of girls and women with the condition. Other skeletal anomalies associated with trisomy X include clinodactyly (incurved little fingers), radioulnar synostosis (the fusion of the long bones in the forearm), flat feet, and hyper-extensible joints. These findings are not unique to trisomy X, but rather are seen in sex chromosome aneuploidy disorders as a whole.
Severe internal disease is rare in trisomy X. Genitourinary conditions are more common than in the general population, particularly kidney and ovary malformations. The autoimmune disease SLE is more common in women than men by a factor of 9 and the risk is further exacerbated in Trisomy X by a factor of approximately 2.5. According to one study Sjögren syndrome is also more common in trisomy X than in the general population. Conditions such as sleep apnea, asthma, scoliosis, and hip dysplasia have also been linked to sex chromosome aneuploidies as a whole, including trisomy X. Although heart defects are common in pentasomy X, they are no more frequent in trisomy X than the general population.
Puberty starts around the expected age and progresses as normal. Median anti-Müllerian hormone levels are lower corresponding to a smaller ovarian reserve, menopause begins five years earlier on average and there is an increased risk of premature ovarian failure (POF). Among women with POF Trisomy X is over-represented by a factor of five and those with both trisomy and autoimmune disease are at extra high risk. The rate of miscarriage is normal and fertility has been reported to be either unaffected or somewhat lower than expected. IVF and similar interventions are seldom necessary.
Neurodevelopmental
General cognitive functioning is reduced in trisomy X, with an average intelligence quotient of 85–90. Performance IQ tends to be higher than verbal IQ. Though intellectual disability is rare, it is more prevalent than in the general population, occurring in about 5–10% of females with trisomy X compared to approximately 1% of the broader population. While the average is depressed, the effect of trisomy X varies substantially, and some women are highly intelligent.
Infant milestones are normal to slightly delayed. Speech delay is more common than delays in early motor function. Speech therapy is needed in 40%–90% of girls with trisomy X at some point in their lives. More than 75% experience learning disabilities, frequently related to reading skills, but expressive language skills tend to be more affected than receptive skills. Visuospatial ability may also be diminished.
Neuroimaging in trisomy X demonstrates decreased whole brain volumes, correlated with overall intellectual functioning, although cortical thickness is unaffected. These findings are common to X-chromosome polysomy syndromes including Klinefelter syndrome. Epilepsy or electroencephalogram abnormalities may be more common in those with trisomy X, particularly those who are also intellectually disabled. Epilepsy in sex chromosome aneuploidies as a whole is mild, amenable to treatment, and often attenuates or disappears with time. Tremor is reported in approximately a quarter of women with trisomy X and responds to the same treatments as in the general population.
Executive dysfunction, where people have difficulty regulating their actions and emotions, is more prevalent amongst those with trisomy X than the general population. Autism spectrum disorders are more common in trisomy X, and approximately 15% of girls with trisomy X have significant symptoms indicative of such disorders, compared to less than 1% of girls in the general population. The risk of ADHD is also increased and up to 50% of those with Trisomy X are affected.
Psychological
Impaired social regulation is more common in trisomy X, and is in part dependent on emotional dysregulation but also dependent on environmental factors. Girls growing up in stable environments with healthy home lives tend to have relatively high adaptive and social functioning, while significant behavioural and psychological issues are predominantly seen in those from troubled social environments. Though girls with trisomy X usually have good relationships with peers, they trend towards immaturity; some behavioural issues in children with trisomy X are thought to be a consequence of the disconnect between apparent age, as understood via increased height, and cognitive and emotional maturity encouraging hard-to-reach expectations. Girls whose motor and language skills are more severely affected by trisomy X often experience low confidence and self-esteem. These traits vary in severity; though some women with trisomy X are significantly impaired, many are within the normal range of variance, and some are high-functioning and high-achieving.
Some mental health issues are more frequent in women with trisomy X. Dysthymia and cyclothymia, milder forms of depression and bipolar disorder respectively, are more common than in the general population. Women with trisomy X average higher schizotypy, reporting higher levels of introversion, magical thinking, and impulsivity. Around 30% are affected by thought problems and 13% have been diagnosed with psychotic or bipolar disorders. Schizophrenic women are more likely to have trisomy X than the general female population. The prevalence of trisomy X in women with adult-onset schizophrenia is estimated to be around 1 in 400, compared to 1 in 1,000 in women as a whole; the prevalence in childhood onset schizophrenia is unclear, but may be as high as 1 in 40. One in five women with trisomy X report clinically significant levels of anxiety. Estimates of the prevalence of clinical depression vary between 18 and 54%. Women with trisomy X are often "late bloomers", experiencing high rates of psychological distress into early adulthood, but by their mid-thirties having stronger interpersonal bonds and healthy relationships. The study of mental health in trisomy X is complicated by the fact that girls and women who were diagnosed before birth seem to be more mildly affected than those diagnosed after. For instance, psychogenic stomach pains are reported in a disproportionate number of postnatally diagnosed patients, but fewer prenatally diagnosed ones.
Mosaic forms
The most common karyotype in trisomy X is 47,XXX, where all cells have an additional copy of the X chromosome. Mosaicism, where both 47,XXX and other cell lines are present, occurs in over 30% of cases. Mosaic trisomy X can have different outcomes to the non-mosaic condition and further contributes to the variability seen in Trisomy X. Common mosaic forms observed include 46,XX/47,XXX, 45,X/47,XXX (with a Monosomy X cell line), and 47,XXX/48,XXXX (with a tetrasomy X cell line). Complex mosaicism, with cell lines such as 45,X/46,XX/47,XXX, can also be seen.
46,XX/47,XXX
The simplest form of mosaic trisomy X, with a 46,XX/47,XXX karyotype, is milder compared to full trisomy X. There is still an increased occurrence of birth defects, as well as skin and urogenital disorders. Cognitive development is more typical, with improved long-term life outcomes. Although generally milder, 46,XX/47,XXX mosaicism is associated with a higher risk of chromosome anomalies in offspring than full trisomy X. The increased risk of abnormal offspring in mosaicism has been hypothesized to be a consequence of oocyte abnormality in 46,XX/47,XXX women not seen in full 47,XXX. Some writers have recommended women with 46,XX/47,XXX karyotypes undergo screening for chromosomal disorders during pregnancy.
45,X/47,XXX
Around 5% of females with Turner syndrome, defined by a karyotype with a single copy of the X chromosome, have a 47,XXX cell line. Mosaic karyotypes with both 45,X and 47,XXX cells are considered Turner syndrome rather than trisomy X, but the presence of 47,XXX cells influences the disorder, with milder effects than non-mosaic Turner syndrome. Most are still affected by short stature and early premature ovarian failure (before age 30) is common, but a majority reach puberty and menarche spontaneously. Almost all women with regular Turner syndrome are sterile, but those with 47,XXX cell lines are typically fertile. Although women with trisomy X have lower IQs than the general population and women with Turner syndrome do not, intellectual disability does not appear to be more common in the mosaic than for non-mosaic Turner's. Women with mosaic Turner syndrome tend to have similar dysmorphic features to those with non-mosaic Turner's syndrome, but less marked, and some have none of the traditional visible Turner traits.
47,XXX/48,XXXX
Mosaicism with a tetrasomy X cell line generally appears more severe than typical trisomy X. Like trisomy X, tetrasomy X has a variable phenotype muddled by underdiagnosis. The tetrasomy is generally more severe than the trisomy; intellectual disability is characteristic, dysmorphic features more visible, and puberty often altered.
Causes
Maternal (top) and paternal (bottom) nondisjunction leading to trisomy XTrisomy X, like other aneuploidy disorders, is caused by a process called nondisjunction. Nondisjunction occurs when homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids fail to separate properly during meiosis, the process that produces gametes (eggs or sperm), and result in gametes with too many or too few chromosomes. Nondisjunction can occur during gametogenesis, where the trisomy is present from conception, or zygote development, where it occurs after conception. When nondisjunction occurs after conception, the resulting karyotype is generally mosaic, with both 47,XXX and other cell lines.
Most cases of trisomy X occur through maternal nondisjunction, with around 90% of cases traced to errors in oogenesis. The vast majority of cases of trisomy X occur randomly; they have nothing to do with the chromosomes of the parents and little chance of recurring in the family. Nondisjunction is related to advanced maternal age, and trisomy X specifically appears to have a small but significant maternal age effect. In a cohort of women with trisomy X born in the 1960s, the average maternal age was 33. The risk of women with full trisomy X having chromosomally abnormal children is low, likely below 1%. Recurrence may occur if the mother has mosaicism for trisomy X, particularly in ovarian cells, but this makes up a small fraction of cases.
Proposed mechanisms behind the phenotype of Trisomy X include incomplete X-chromosome inactivation, and corresponding changes to DNA methylation and gene expression across the entire genome. X-inactivation is never total and around 15% of genes on the second X chromosome are only partially deactivated, but it is unknown to what extent genes on the third chromosome escape inactivation. With respect to specific genes increased copy numbers of the X-chromosomal SHOX gene has been linked to increased height.
Diagnosis and differential diagnosis
Chromosome aneuploidies such as trisomy X are diagnosed via karyotype, the process in which chromosomes are tested from blood, bone marrow, amniotic fluid, or placental cells. As trisomy X is generally mild or asymptomatic, most cases are never diagnosed. Around 10% of cases of trisomy X are diagnosed in the person's lifetime; many are ascertained coincidentally during prenatal testing via amniocentesis or chorionic villi sampling, which is routinely performed for advanced maternal age. Postnatal testing is typically prompted by tall stature, hypotonia, developmental disability, mild dysmorphic features such as hypertelorism or clinodactyly, and premature ovarian failure.
Tetrasomy X, characterized by four copies of the X chromosome, has some signs in common with more severe cases of trisomy X. Intellectual disability, generally mild, is more frequently seen in the tetrasomy than the trisomy. There is more of a tendency towards noticeable dysmorphic features such as hypertelorism, clinodactyly, and epicanthic folds. Unlike trisomy X, approximately half of women with tetrasomy X have no or incomplete pubertal development. Although in most cases tetrasomy X is significantly more severe than trisomy X, some cases of tetrasomy X are mild, and some cases of trisomy X severe. Like trisomy X, the full phenotypic range of tetrasomy X is unknown due to underdiagnosis. Pentasomy X, with five X chromosomes, may rarely be a differential diagnosis for trisomy X. The phenotype of pentasomy X is more severe than the trisomy or tetrasomy, with significant intellectual disability, heart defects, microcephaly, and short stature.
Due to overlapping dysmorphic features, such as epicanthic folds and upslanting palpebral fissures, some cases of trisomy X may be ascertained due to suspicion of Down syndrome. When the primary symptom is tall stature, trisomy X may be considered alongside other conditions depending on the rest of the phenotype. Marfan syndrome may be considered due to the disproportion between limb and torso length observed in both syndromes, as well as both experiencing joint issues. Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, another disproportionate tall stature syndrome, can cause developmental disability similar to that seen in some cases of trisomy X.
As karyotypic diagnosis is conclusive, differential diagnosis can be abandoned after karyotype in most cases of trisomy X. However, due to the relatively high prevalence of trisomy X, other congenital disorders may occur alongside a 47,XXX karyotype. Differential diagnosis remains indicated when the phenotype is particularly severe for what a 47,XXX karyotype alone explains, such as severe intellectual disability or significant malformation.
Prognosis
Parent of a daughter with trisomy X"My doctor told us that if our unborn daughter had to have a genetic issue, Trisomy X is the one to have, so to speak. He said that many girls with this condition are completely normal, and that it is not physically noticeable. The issues that we could have might be with speech and motor delays, or learning disabilities. The doctor did have us speak with a genetic counselor, but no one encouraged us to terminate and we did not consider it."
The prognosis of trisomy X is broadly good, with adult independence most often achieved, if delayed. Most adults achieve normal life outcomes, pursuing education, employment, or homemaking. Childhood and adolescence, particularly in compulsory education, tends to be more difficult for those with trisomy X than adult life. Parents report their daughters' struggling both academically and socially at school, particularly during secondary education, while adults report better adaptation after leaving education and entering the workforce. Of the women in the cohort studies followed to early adulthood, 7 of 37 dropped out of high school, while three attended university. Compared to age-matched women in the general population, women with trisomy X are 68% as likely to live with a partner, 64% as likely to have children, 36% as likely to hold higher education qualifications, and almost twice as likely to be retired from the workforce.
Physical health is generally good and many women with trisomy X live into old age. Little data exists on aging in trisomy X. Data from the Danish Cytogenetic Central Register, which covers 13% of women with trisomy X in Denmark, suggests a life expectancy of 71 for women with full trisomy X and 78 for mosaics, compared to 84 for controls. The limited sample, composed only of women with trisomy X who have come to medical attention, has led to speculation this number is an underestimate.
Women with trisomy X who were diagnosed prenatally have better outcomes as a group than those diagnosed postnatally, and 46,XX/47,XXX mosaics better than those with full trisomy X. Some of the improved outcome in prenatal diagnosis appears to be a function of higher socioeconomic status amongst parents.
Epidemiology
Trisomy X is a relatively common genetic disorder, occurring in around 1 in 1,000 female births. Due to its subtle effects, at most 10% of cases are diagnosed during their lifetime. Large cytogenetic studies in Denmark find a diagnosed prevalence of 6 in 100,000 females, around 7% of the actual number of girls and women with trisomy X expected to exist in the general population. Diagnosis in the United Kingdom is particularly low, with an estimated 2% of cases medically recognized. Amongst the 244,000 women in the UK Biobank research sample, 110 were found to have 47,XXX karyotypes, corresponding to approximately half the number expected in the population. The fact this number is still reduced compared to the broader population is thought to be an effect of UK Biobank participants being less likely to be of low IQ and low socioeconomic status than the general population, both of which are more frequent in trisomy X.
Trisomy X only occurs in females, as the Y chromosome is in most cases necessary for male sexual development. In addition to its high base rate, trisomy X is more common in some clinical subpopulations. The karyotype occurs in an estimated 3% of women with early menopause, 1 in 350 with Sjögren syndrome, and 1 in 400 with systemic lupus erythematosus.
Rate and age of diagnosis- Expected and observed number of people diagnosed with trisomy X and Turner syndrome in Denmark
- Violin plots of age at diagnosis for Klinefelter syndrome, trisomy X, and XYY syndrome
History
The first known case of trisomy X, in a 176 cm (5 ft 9+1⁄2 in) woman who experienced premature ovarian failure at the age of 19, was diagnosed in 1959 by a team led by Patricia Jacobs. The late 1950s and early 1960s were a period of frequent ascertainment of previously unknown sex chromosome aneuploidies, with the 47,XXX karyotype discovered alongside 45,X and 47,XXY the same year. Early studies on sex chromosome aneuploidy screened patients residing in institutions, depicting the karyotypes as incapacitating; even at the time, this research was criticized for giving an inaccurate portrait of sex chromosome aneuploidy. Early reports of women with trisomy X have since been criticized for a dehumanizing ableist perspective, showing nude photographs of institutionalized women described as "mental deficiency patients".
In response to the biased early studies, a newborn screening program for sex chromosome aneuploidy disorders was implemented in the 1960s. Almost 200,000 neonates were screened in Aarhus, Toronto, New Haven, Denver, Edinburgh, and Winnipeg; those found to have sex chromosome aneuploidies were followed up for 20 years for most of the cohorts, and longer for the Edinburgh and Denver cohorts. The children with trisomy X and Klinefelter's had their karyotypes disclosed to their parents, but due to the then-present perception that XYY syndrome was associated with violent criminality, those diagnoses were hidden from the family.
These studies dispelled the idea that sex chromosome aneuploidies were "tantamount to a life of serious handicaps" and revealed their high prevalence in the population. They provided extensive information on the outcomes of trisomy X and other sex chromosome aneuploidies, forming much of the medical literature on the topic to this day. However, the small sample sizes of the long-term follow-ups in particular stymies extrapolation; by 1999, only 16 women in Edinburgh were still being followed. In 2007, Nicole Tartaglia founded the eXtraordinarY Kids Clinic in Denver to study children with sex chromosome aneuploidies; around one-fifth of patients at the clinic had trisomy X as of 2015. Several centers modeled on the clinic have since opened across the US. In 2020, she introduced the eXtraordinarY Babies Study, a planned cohort study on people prenatally diagnosed with sex chromosome aneuploidies.
The first description of trisomy X used the term 'superfemale' to describe the karyotype by analogy to Drosophila flies, a term that was immediately disputed. Curt Stern proposed the use of 'metafemale', which Jacobs criticized as both medically inaccurate and an "illegitimate product of a Graeco-Roman alliance". Bernard Lennon, opposing the use of 'superfemale' as misleading and possessed of an inappropriate "emotional element", suggested 'XXX syndrome'. For some years, the disorder was predominantly known as 'triple X syndrome' or 'triple X', though the latter is now discouraged. In 2022 Trisomy X was included alongside XYY at the 3rd International Workshop on Klinefelter Syndrome, which concluded that the body of research was insufficient to formulate robust guidelines for Trisomy X.
Society and culture
Awareness and diagnosis of sex chromosome aneuploidies is increasing. In the late 2010s, several state governments across the United States declared May to be National X & Y Chromosome Variation Awareness Month.
Descriptions of trisomy X overwhelmingly consider the karyotype from a medical perspective, rather than a sociological or educational one. One topic in the sociological discussion of trisomy X and other sex chromosome aneuploidies is disability-selective abortion. Fetuses with sex chromosome aneuploidies are more likely to be aborted, though fetuses with trisomy X are less likely than for such conditions as a whole. A literature review of 19 studies found that nearly one-third of pregnancies with a child with trisomy X were aborted; it also found that parents who were counselled by a genetic counseller with expertise in sex chromosome aneuploidies, rather than an obstetrician or gynecologist, were less likely to abort. Abortion rates in sex chromosome aneuploidies have decreased over time with improved counselling.
In other animals
Trisomy X has been observed in other species that use the XY sex-determination system. Six cases of trisomy X have been recorded in dogs, for which the karyotype is 79,XXX compared to 78,XX for an euploid female dog. Unlike in humans, trisomy X in dogs is strongly linked to infertility, either primary anestrus or infertility with an otherwise normal estrous cycle. Canine trisomy X is thought to be underascertained, as most pet dogs are desexed and so underlying infertility will not be discovered. Three of the six known cases of canine trisomy X demonstrated behavioural issues such as fearfulness, inciting speculation about a link between the karyotype and psychological concerns as seen in humans with the condition. An additional dog with normal fertility and no reported behavioural issues was found to have a mosaic 78,XX/79,XXX karyotype. The canine X chromosome has a particularly large pseudoautosomal region, and dogs accordingly have a lower rate of monosomy X than observed in other species; however, a large pseudoautosomal region is not considered a contraindication for trisomy X, and canine trisomy X may have a comparable prevalence to the human form.
Trisomy X is also observed in cattle, where it corresponds to a 61,XXX karyotype. A survey of 71 heifers who failed to become pregnant after two breeding seasons found two cases of trisomy X. As of 2021 a total of eight heifers with Trisomy X have been identified, seven of them were infertile. The condition also affect the river buffalo where the three known cases were sterile.
See also
Notes
- 'Karyotype' as a term has multiple meanings, all of which are used here. It may refer to a person's chromosome complement, to the test used to discern said chromosome complement, or to an image of chromosomes ascertained via such a test.
- Aneuploidy is the presence of too many or too few chromosomes in a cell.
- Male phenotypes, innate or induced, with forms of X chromosome polysomy that are usually phenotypically female do occur. For trisomy X, a trans man and several men with sex reversal have been recorded.
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Book sources
- Skuse D, Printzlau F, Wolstencroft J (2018). "Sex chromosome aneuploidies". In Geschwind DH, Paulson HL, Klein C (eds.). Handbook of Clinical Neurology. Neurogenetics, Part I. Vol. 147. Elsevier. pp. 355–376. doi:10.1016/b978-0-444-63233-3.00024-5. ISBN 978-0-444-63233-3.
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External links
- NLM (2008). Triple X syndrome Genetics Home Reference
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