Entry - #140000 - HAND-FOOT-GENITAL SYNDROME; HFG - OMIM
# 140000

HAND-FOOT-GENITAL SYNDROME; HFG


Alternative titles; symbols

HAND-FOOT-UTERUS SYNDROME; HFU


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
7p15.2 Hand-foot-genital syndrome 140000 AD 3 HOXA13 142959
Clinical Synopsis
 

INHERITANCE
- Autosomal dominant
GENITOURINARY
External Genitalia (Male)
- Hypospadias
- Short penis
- Chordee
- Bifid scrotum
Internal Genitalia (Female)
- Longitudinal vaginal septum
- Double uterus
- Double cervix
Kidneys
- Chronic pyelonephritis
- Renal insufficiency
- Renal transplant
Ureters
- Vesicoureteral reflux
- Ureteropelvic junction obstruction
SKELETAL
Hands
- Short thumbs
- Proximally placed thumbs
- Hypoplastic thenar eminences
- Second finger ulnar deviation
- Fifth finger clinodactyly
- Fifth finger brachydactyly
- Carpal delayed ossification
- Short first metacarpal
- Hypoplastic middle phalanges
- Pseudoepiphyses
Feet
- Absent halluces
- Short halluces
- Medially deviated halluces
- Brachydactyly (2nd-5th toes)
- Tarsal delayed ossification
- Short first metatarsal
- Hypoplastic distal and middle phalanges
- Fused cuneiforms
MOLECULAR BASIS
- Caused by mutation in the homeobox A13 gene (HOXA13, 142959.0001)

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that hand-foot-genital syndrome (HFG) is caused by heterozygous mutation in the HOXA13 gene (142959) on chromosome 7p15.


Description

Hand-foot-genital syndrome (HFGS) is an autosomal dominant condition characterized by distal limb and distal genitourinary tract malformations. The most striking limb abnormality is first-digit hypoplasia, comprising short, proximally placed thumbs with hypoplastic thenar eminences and short, medially deviated halluces. There is also ulnar deviation of the second fingers, clinodactyly/brachydactyly of the fifth fingers, brachydactyly of the second to fifth toes, and delayed ossification, fusion, and shortening of the carpals and tarsals. These abnormalities appear to be fully penetrant, bilateral, and symmetrical, with little variation in severity. In contrast, genitourinary tract abnormalities are incompletely penetrant and variably severe, and include hypospadias in males, Mullerian duct fusion defects in females, vesicoureteric reflux, and pelviureteric junction obstruction (summary by Goodman et al., 2000).


Clinical Features

The clinical features include small feet with unusually short great toes and abnormal thumbs. Females with the disorder have duplication of the genital tract, including longitudinal vaginal septum (Stern et al., 1970). The radiographic changes were reviewed by Poznanski et al. (1970), who suggested that there is a typical metacarpophalangeal profile pattern. The changes included short first metacarpal and metatarsal, short fifth fingers with clinodactyly, trapezium-scaphoid fusion in the wrist, and cuneiform-navicular fusion in the foot.

Poznanski et al. (1975) described another kindred with this disorder. The pattern of radiologic changes in the hands and feet were sufficiently characteristic to suggest the diagnosis when the proband, a girl less than 4 years old, was admitted for evaluation of urinary incontinence and recurrent urinary tract infection. This was the prototype for one of the 'phenotypic communities of human malformation syndromes' discussed by Pinsky (1974).

Elias et al. (1978) investigated a third family in which 5 females in 3 generations were affected. The proband was a 17-year-old girl with strabismus, hypoplastic thenar eminences, malformed thumbs, bilateral fifth finger clinodactyly, short halluces, uterus bicornis bicollis, longitudinal vaginal septum and bilateral ureterovesical reflux.

Halal (1988) described a family in which affected females had urologic abnormalities. At least 3 affected males had penile hypospadias with chordee. A fourth, who had not been married, had a surgical operation on the genitalia at age 45, but the type of surgery was not known. Hypoplastic thenar eminences, 'stubby' thumbs, 5th finger clinodactyly, and short great toes were commented on. One affected female in this family had hypospadiac urethra and ectopic accessory ureteral orifice, with recurrent urinary tract infections leading to chronic pyelonephritis, renal insufficiency, and kidney transplantation. Verp (1989) corroborated the significance of urologic abnormalities as part of this syndrome in females.

Hennekam (1989) pointed out 2 other reports of this syndrome and reported a kindred with autosomal dominant inheritance. Complete duplication of the genital tract including a longitudinal vaginal septum was expressed in 3 females. The diagnosis of HFG syndrome was not completely certain because there were no hand anomalies or typical metacarpophalangeal profile pattern. An additional feature was the presence of external ear anomalies; 6 members of the family had small ears with thickened, dysplastic helices.

Verp et al. (1983) reported a family in which 5 affected individuals in 3 generations, all female, had hand and foot anomalies consisting of short thumbs with hypoplastic distal phalanges, brachyclinodactyly V, bilateral hypoplasia and medial deviation of the distal halluces, and clinodactyly of the fifth toes. In 2 of the 5 women who were thoroughly evaluated, incomplete mullerian fusion defects were found. The proposita had presented with recurrent urinary tract infections due to bilateral vesicoureteral reflux at age 2 years. Donnenfeld et al. (1992) reported on the same family, studied when the proposita presented at 19 years of age in premature labor at 22 weeks of gestation due to her uterine anomaly. They documented the genitourinary abnormalities in her 2 affected sisters, not previously examined, and documented hypospadias and urinary tract anomalies in 2 males from the fourth generation. One of the boys had bilateral vesicoureteral reflux and the other had bilateral ureteropelvic junction obstruction. Hypospadias is a manifestation of the disorder in males (Giedion and Prader, 1976).

Cleveland and Holmes (1990) emphasized the importance of hallux varus in the diagnosis.


Inheritance

Hennekam (1989) reported a kindred with autosomal dominant inheritance of HFG.

Fryns et al. (1993) documented male-to-male transmission. An affected father begot 3 affected sons. A grade IV hypospadias, which was the most severe genital anomaly, was present in the youngest, moderately mentally retarded microcephalic male sib.


Molecular Genetics

On the basis of update and linkage analysis of the family reported by Stern et al. (1970), Mortlock (1996) and his colleagues demonstrated mutation in the HOXA13 gene (142959) as the cause of the hand-foot-uterus syndrome. Affected members of the family reported by Stern et al. (1970) showed a nonsense mutation (142959.0001) which converted a highly conserved tryptophan residue in the homeodomain of HOXA13 to a stop codon and truncated 20 amino acids from the protein (Mortlock and Innis, 1997).

Goodman et al. (2000) examined the HOXA13 gene in 2 new and 4 previously reported families with features of HFG syndrome and identified heterozygous mutations in 5 families (see, e.g., 142959.0002-142959.0004). In 3 families, nonsense mutations truncating the encoded protein N-terminal to or within the homeodomain produced typical limb and genitourinary abnormalities; in the fourth family, an expansion of an N-terminal polyalanine tract produced a similar phenotype; in the fifth family, a missense mutation, which altered an invariant domain, produced an exceptionally severe limb phenotype. In the sixth family, first reported by Hennekam (1989), in which limb abnormalities were atypical, no HOXA13 mutation was detected. In all families in which a mutation was detected, the limb abnormalities were fully penetrant, bilateral, and symmetrical, with analogous involvement of the hands and feet. In contrast, genitourinary abnormalities were incompletely penetrant and variably severe.


REFERENCES

  1. Cleveland, R. H., Holmes, L. B. Hand-foot-genital syndrome: the importance of hallux varus. Pediat. Radiol. 20: 339-343, 1990. [PubMed: 2349017, related citations] [Full Text]

  2. Donnenfeld, A. E., Schrager, D. S., Corson, S. L. Update on a family with hand-foot-genital syndrome: hypospadias and urinary tract abnormalities in two boys from the fourth generation. Am. J. Med. Genet. 44: 482-484, 1992. [PubMed: 1442892, related citations] [Full Text]

  3. Elias, S., Simpson, J. L., Feingold, M., Sarto, G. E. The hand-foot-uterus syndrome: a rare autosomal dominant disorder. (Abstract) Fertil. Steril. 29: 239-240, 1978.

  4. Fryns, J. P., Vogels, A., Decock, P., van den Berghe, H. The hand-foot-genital syndrome: on the variable expression in affected males. Clin. Genet. 43: 232-234, 1993. [PubMed: 8375102, related citations] [Full Text]

  5. Giedion, A., Prader, A. Hand-foot-uterus (HFU) syndrome with hypospadias: the hand-foot-genital (HFG) syndrome. Pediat. Radiol. 4: 96-102, 1976. [PubMed: 987572, related citations] [Full Text]

  6. Goodman, F. R., Bacchelli, C., Brady, A. F., Brueton, L. A., Fryns, J.-P., Mortlock, D. P., Innis, J. W., Holmes, L. B., Donnenfeld, A. E., Feingold, M., Beemer, F. A., Hennekam, R. C. M., Scambler, P. J. Novel HOXA13 mutations and the phenotypic spectrum of hand-foot-genital syndrome. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 67: 197-202, 2000. [PubMed: 10839976, images, related citations] [Full Text]

  7. Halal, F. The hand-foot-genital (hand-foot-uterus) syndrome: family report and update. Am. J. Med. Genet. 30: 793-803, 1988. [PubMed: 3189398, related citations] [Full Text]

  8. Hennekam, R. C. M. Acral-genital anomalies combined with ear anomalies. (Letter) Am. J. Med. Genet. 34: 454-455, 1989. [PubMed: 2596533, related citations] [Full Text]

  9. Mortlock, D. P., Innis, J. W. Mutation of HOXA13 in hand-foot-genital syndrome. Nature Genet. 15: 179-181, 1997. [PubMed: 9020844, related citations] [Full Text]

  10. Mortlock, D. P. Personal Communication. Ann Arbor, Mich. 10/31/1996.

  11. Pinsky, L. A community of human malformation syndromes involving the mullerian ducts, distal extremities, urinary tract, and ears. Teratology 9: 65-80, 1974. [PubMed: 4855855, related citations] [Full Text]

  12. Poznanski, A. K., Kuhns, L. R., Lapides, J., Stern, A. M. A new family with the hand-foot-genital syndrome--a wider spectrum of the hand-foot-uterus syndrome. Birth Defects Orig. Art. Ser. 11(4): 127-135, 1975. [PubMed: 1156681, related citations]

  13. Poznanski, A. K., Stern, A. M., Gall, J. C., Jr. Radiographic findings in the hand-foot-uterus syndrome (HFUS). Radiology 95: 129-134, 1970. [PubMed: 5417032, related citations] [Full Text]

  14. Stern, A. M., Gall, J. C., Jr., Perry, B. L., Stimson, C. W., Weitkamp, L. R., Poznanski, A. K. The hand-foot-uterus syndrome: a new hereditary disorder characterized by hand and foot dysplasia, dermatoglyphic abnormalities, and partial duplication of the female genital tract. J. Pediat. 77: 109-116, 1970. [PubMed: 5450271, related citations] [Full Text]

  15. Verp, M. S., Simpson, J. L., Elias, S., Carson, S. A., Sarto, G. E., Feingold, M. Heritable aspects of uterine anomalies. I. Three familial aggregates with mullerian fusion anomalies. Fertil. Steril. 40: 80-85, 1983. [PubMed: 6862042, related citations] [Full Text]

  16. Verp, M. S. Urinary tract abnormalities in hand-foot-genital syndrome. (Letter) Am. J. Med. Genet. 32: 555 only, 1989. [PubMed: 2774004, related citations] [Full Text]


Anne M. Stumpf - updated : 03/09/2020
Kelly A. Przylepa - updated : 2/18/2005
Creation Date:
Victor A. McKusick : 6/4/1986
carol : 03/10/2020
alopez : 03/09/2020
joanna : 04/18/2014
carol : 11/12/2013
joanna : 12/31/2008
terry : 9/25/2008
wwang : 2/28/2005
terry : 2/18/2005
mark : 2/2/1997
terry : 1/31/1997
terry : 1/29/1997
terry : 11/22/1996
terry : 11/21/1996
mimadm : 9/24/1994
davew : 7/20/1994
terry : 5/9/1994
carol : 11/5/1993
carol : 6/7/1993
carol : 5/7/1993

# 140000

HAND-FOOT-GENITAL SYNDROME; HFG


Alternative titles; symbols

HAND-FOOT-UTERUS SYNDROME; HFU


SNOMEDCT: 702425002;   ORPHA: 2438;   DO: 0060739;  


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
7p15.2 Hand-foot-genital syndrome 140000 Autosomal dominant 3 HOXA13 142959

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that hand-foot-genital syndrome (HFG) is caused by heterozygous mutation in the HOXA13 gene (142959) on chromosome 7p15.


Description

Hand-foot-genital syndrome (HFGS) is an autosomal dominant condition characterized by distal limb and distal genitourinary tract malformations. The most striking limb abnormality is first-digit hypoplasia, comprising short, proximally placed thumbs with hypoplastic thenar eminences and short, medially deviated halluces. There is also ulnar deviation of the second fingers, clinodactyly/brachydactyly of the fifth fingers, brachydactyly of the second to fifth toes, and delayed ossification, fusion, and shortening of the carpals and tarsals. These abnormalities appear to be fully penetrant, bilateral, and symmetrical, with little variation in severity. In contrast, genitourinary tract abnormalities are incompletely penetrant and variably severe, and include hypospadias in males, Mullerian duct fusion defects in females, vesicoureteric reflux, and pelviureteric junction obstruction (summary by Goodman et al., 2000).


Clinical Features

The clinical features include small feet with unusually short great toes and abnormal thumbs. Females with the disorder have duplication of the genital tract, including longitudinal vaginal septum (Stern et al., 1970). The radiographic changes were reviewed by Poznanski et al. (1970), who suggested that there is a typical metacarpophalangeal profile pattern. The changes included short first metacarpal and metatarsal, short fifth fingers with clinodactyly, trapezium-scaphoid fusion in the wrist, and cuneiform-navicular fusion in the foot.

Poznanski et al. (1975) described another kindred with this disorder. The pattern of radiologic changes in the hands and feet were sufficiently characteristic to suggest the diagnosis when the proband, a girl less than 4 years old, was admitted for evaluation of urinary incontinence and recurrent urinary tract infection. This was the prototype for one of the 'phenotypic communities of human malformation syndromes' discussed by Pinsky (1974).

Elias et al. (1978) investigated a third family in which 5 females in 3 generations were affected. The proband was a 17-year-old girl with strabismus, hypoplastic thenar eminences, malformed thumbs, bilateral fifth finger clinodactyly, short halluces, uterus bicornis bicollis, longitudinal vaginal septum and bilateral ureterovesical reflux.

Halal (1988) described a family in which affected females had urologic abnormalities. At least 3 affected males had penile hypospadias with chordee. A fourth, who had not been married, had a surgical operation on the genitalia at age 45, but the type of surgery was not known. Hypoplastic thenar eminences, 'stubby' thumbs, 5th finger clinodactyly, and short great toes were commented on. One affected female in this family had hypospadiac urethra and ectopic accessory ureteral orifice, with recurrent urinary tract infections leading to chronic pyelonephritis, renal insufficiency, and kidney transplantation. Verp (1989) corroborated the significance of urologic abnormalities as part of this syndrome in females.

Hennekam (1989) pointed out 2 other reports of this syndrome and reported a kindred with autosomal dominant inheritance. Complete duplication of the genital tract including a longitudinal vaginal septum was expressed in 3 females. The diagnosis of HFG syndrome was not completely certain because there were no hand anomalies or typical metacarpophalangeal profile pattern. An additional feature was the presence of external ear anomalies; 6 members of the family had small ears with thickened, dysplastic helices.

Verp et al. (1983) reported a family in which 5 affected individuals in 3 generations, all female, had hand and foot anomalies consisting of short thumbs with hypoplastic distal phalanges, brachyclinodactyly V, bilateral hypoplasia and medial deviation of the distal halluces, and clinodactyly of the fifth toes. In 2 of the 5 women who were thoroughly evaluated, incomplete mullerian fusion defects were found. The proposita had presented with recurrent urinary tract infections due to bilateral vesicoureteral reflux at age 2 years. Donnenfeld et al. (1992) reported on the same family, studied when the proposita presented at 19 years of age in premature labor at 22 weeks of gestation due to her uterine anomaly. They documented the genitourinary abnormalities in her 2 affected sisters, not previously examined, and documented hypospadias and urinary tract anomalies in 2 males from the fourth generation. One of the boys had bilateral vesicoureteral reflux and the other had bilateral ureteropelvic junction obstruction. Hypospadias is a manifestation of the disorder in males (Giedion and Prader, 1976).

Cleveland and Holmes (1990) emphasized the importance of hallux varus in the diagnosis.


Inheritance

Hennekam (1989) reported a kindred with autosomal dominant inheritance of HFG.

Fryns et al. (1993) documented male-to-male transmission. An affected father begot 3 affected sons. A grade IV hypospadias, which was the most severe genital anomaly, was present in the youngest, moderately mentally retarded microcephalic male sib.


Molecular Genetics

On the basis of update and linkage analysis of the family reported by Stern et al. (1970), Mortlock (1996) and his colleagues demonstrated mutation in the HOXA13 gene (142959) as the cause of the hand-foot-uterus syndrome. Affected members of the family reported by Stern et al. (1970) showed a nonsense mutation (142959.0001) which converted a highly conserved tryptophan residue in the homeodomain of HOXA13 to a stop codon and truncated 20 amino acids from the protein (Mortlock and Innis, 1997).

Goodman et al. (2000) examined the HOXA13 gene in 2 new and 4 previously reported families with features of HFG syndrome and identified heterozygous mutations in 5 families (see, e.g., 142959.0002-142959.0004). In 3 families, nonsense mutations truncating the encoded protein N-terminal to or within the homeodomain produced typical limb and genitourinary abnormalities; in the fourth family, an expansion of an N-terminal polyalanine tract produced a similar phenotype; in the fifth family, a missense mutation, which altered an invariant domain, produced an exceptionally severe limb phenotype. In the sixth family, first reported by Hennekam (1989), in which limb abnormalities were atypical, no HOXA13 mutation was detected. In all families in which a mutation was detected, the limb abnormalities were fully penetrant, bilateral, and symmetrical, with analogous involvement of the hands and feet. In contrast, genitourinary abnormalities were incompletely penetrant and variably severe.


REFERENCES

  1. Cleveland, R. H., Holmes, L. B. Hand-foot-genital syndrome: the importance of hallux varus. Pediat. Radiol. 20: 339-343, 1990. [PubMed: 2349017] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02013170]

  2. Donnenfeld, A. E., Schrager, D. S., Corson, S. L. Update on a family with hand-foot-genital syndrome: hypospadias and urinary tract abnormalities in two boys from the fourth generation. Am. J. Med. Genet. 44: 482-484, 1992. [PubMed: 1442892] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.1320440419]

  3. Elias, S., Simpson, J. L., Feingold, M., Sarto, G. E. The hand-foot-uterus syndrome: a rare autosomal dominant disorder. (Abstract) Fertil. Steril. 29: 239-240, 1978.

  4. Fryns, J. P., Vogels, A., Decock, P., van den Berghe, H. The hand-foot-genital syndrome: on the variable expression in affected males. Clin. Genet. 43: 232-234, 1993. [PubMed: 8375102] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-0004.1993.tb03808.x]

  5. Giedion, A., Prader, A. Hand-foot-uterus (HFU) syndrome with hypospadias: the hand-foot-genital (HFG) syndrome. Pediat. Radiol. 4: 96-102, 1976. [PubMed: 987572] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00973951]

  6. Goodman, F. R., Bacchelli, C., Brady, A. F., Brueton, L. A., Fryns, J.-P., Mortlock, D. P., Innis, J. W., Holmes, L. B., Donnenfeld, A. E., Feingold, M., Beemer, F. A., Hennekam, R. C. M., Scambler, P. J. Novel HOXA13 mutations and the phenotypic spectrum of hand-foot-genital syndrome. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 67: 197-202, 2000. [PubMed: 10839976] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1086/302961]

  7. Halal, F. The hand-foot-genital (hand-foot-uterus) syndrome: family report and update. Am. J. Med. Genet. 30: 793-803, 1988. [PubMed: 3189398] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.1320300312]

  8. Hennekam, R. C. M. Acral-genital anomalies combined with ear anomalies. (Letter) Am. J. Med. Genet. 34: 454-455, 1989. [PubMed: 2596533] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.1320340325]

  9. Mortlock, D. P., Innis, J. W. Mutation of HOXA13 in hand-foot-genital syndrome. Nature Genet. 15: 179-181, 1997. [PubMed: 9020844] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1038/ng0297-179]

  10. Mortlock, D. P. Personal Communication. Ann Arbor, Mich. 10/31/1996.

  11. Pinsky, L. A community of human malformation syndromes involving the mullerian ducts, distal extremities, urinary tract, and ears. Teratology 9: 65-80, 1974. [PubMed: 4855855] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/tera.1420090109]

  12. Poznanski, A. K., Kuhns, L. R., Lapides, J., Stern, A. M. A new family with the hand-foot-genital syndrome--a wider spectrum of the hand-foot-uterus syndrome. Birth Defects Orig. Art. Ser. 11(4): 127-135, 1975. [PubMed: 1156681]

  13. Poznanski, A. K., Stern, A. M., Gall, J. C., Jr. Radiographic findings in the hand-foot-uterus syndrome (HFUS). Radiology 95: 129-134, 1970. [PubMed: 5417032] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1148/95.1.129]

  14. Stern, A. M., Gall, J. C., Jr., Perry, B. L., Stimson, C. W., Weitkamp, L. R., Poznanski, A. K. The hand-foot-uterus syndrome: a new hereditary disorder characterized by hand and foot dysplasia, dermatoglyphic abnormalities, and partial duplication of the female genital tract. J. Pediat. 77: 109-116, 1970. [PubMed: 5450271] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-3476(70)80052-x]

  15. Verp, M. S., Simpson, J. L., Elias, S., Carson, S. A., Sarto, G. E., Feingold, M. Heritable aspects of uterine anomalies. I. Three familial aggregates with mullerian fusion anomalies. Fertil. Steril. 40: 80-85, 1983. [PubMed: 6862042] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)47181-5]

  16. Verp, M. S. Urinary tract abnormalities in hand-foot-genital syndrome. (Letter) Am. J. Med. Genet. 32: 555 only, 1989. [PubMed: 2774004] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.1320320429]


Contributors:
Anne M. Stumpf - updated : 03/09/2020
Kelly A. Przylepa - updated : 2/18/2005

Creation Date:
Victor A. McKusick : 6/4/1986

Edit History:
carol : 03/10/2020
alopez : 03/09/2020
joanna : 04/18/2014
carol : 11/12/2013
joanna : 12/31/2008
terry : 9/25/2008
wwang : 2/28/2005
terry : 2/18/2005
mark : 2/2/1997
terry : 1/31/1997
terry : 1/29/1997
terry : 11/22/1996
terry : 11/21/1996
mimadm : 9/24/1994
davew : 7/20/1994
terry : 5/9/1994
carol : 11/5/1993
carol : 6/7/1993
carol : 5/7/1993