Comparison of Neurofibromatosis Type 1 and Proteus Syndrome
Neurofibromatosis Type 1 | Proteus Syndrome | |
---|---|---|
Prevalence | Frequent (1 in 3000 to 1 in 4000 live births worldwide) | Extremely rare (<1 in 1,000,000 live births worldwide) |
Equally prevalent in men and women | Two men for every woman | |
Gene | NF1, chromosome 17 | Unknown |
Transmission | 50% hereditary (autosomal dominant) | Sporadic |
50% sporadic (de novo mutation) | Postzygotic somatic mutation (embryonic lethal in nonmosaic form) | |
Diagnostic criteria | ||
General | Café-au-lait spots | Mosaic distribution of lesions |
Neurofibromas | Sporadic occurrence | |
Axillary or inguinal freckling | Progressive course | |
Optic gliomas | ||
Lisch nodules | ||
Characteristic osseous lesion (sphenoid dysplasia, thinning of long bone cortex with or without pseudoarthrosis) | ||
First-degree relative with neurofibromatosis type 1 | ||
Other | Cerebriform connective tissue nevus | |
Linear epidermal nevus | ||
Asymmetric, disproportionate overgrowth | ||
Specific tumors before second decade | ||
Lipomas or focal atrophy of adipose tissue | ||
Capillary, venous, or lymphatic malformation | ||
Facial features including dolichocephaly, a long face, down-slanting palpebrae, ptosis, depressed nasal bridge, anteverted nares, and open-mouth position while at rest |