Clinical Description
Hidrotic ectodermal dysplasia 2 (HED2, Clouston syndrome) is characterized by dystrophy of the nails, alopecia (partial or total), hyperpigmentation of the skin (especially over the joints), palmoplantar hyperkeratosis, and clubbing of the fingers. Sweat glands, sebaceous glands, and teeth are normal. The clinical manifestations are highly variable even within the same family.
To date, more than 150 individuals with HED2 have been identified [Lamartine et al 2000a, Lamartine et al 2000b, Smith et al 2002, van Steensel et al 2003, Zhang et al 2003, Baris et al 2008, Chen et al 2010, Marakhonov et al 2012, Fujimoto et al 2013, Mousumi et al 2013, Sugiura et al 2013, Hu et al 2015, Agarwal et al 2016, Odell et al 2016, Pietrzak et al 2016, Yang et al 2016, Cammarata-Scalisi et al 2019, Khatter et al 2019, Shi et al 2019, Sukakul et al 2019, Zhan et al 2020]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Table 2.
Hidrotic Ectodermal Dysplasia 2: Frequency of Select Features
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Feature | % of Persons w/Feature | Comment |
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Sparse hair /
Alopecia
| 100% | Hair often sparse & fine w/progressive thinning & alopecia in adulthood Involvement of eyebrows, lashes, & axillary & pubic hair
|
Dystrophic nails
| 100% | Typically present from birth or early childhood; often short, thick & slow growing May be cone shaped or triangular; may be assoc w/finger clubbing
|
Palmoplantar
keratoderma
| 70% | Onset usually from early childhood to adolescence; when present, may be focal or diffuse Often has a cobblestoned appearance w/multiple small fissures Hyperkeratosis may also be found on knuckles, knees, & elbows.
|
Hair. In infancy, the scalp hair is fine, wiry, brittle, patchy, and pale. Progressive hair loss may lead to total alopecia, usually by puberty, although alopecia totalis in infancy has also been reported. Eyebrows, eyelashes, and pubic and axillary hair are also typically sparse or absent.
Nails. In early childhood, the nails may be milky white. They gradually become dystrophic, thick, short, and distally separated from the nail bed. There may be vertical ridging (onychorrhexis), triangular nail plates, or absent nails. Nail growth is slow.
Skin. Palmoplantar keratoderma, which is absent in some pedigrees, increases in severity with age; when present, onset is from early childhood to adolescence. Changes are usually diffuse with or without a cobblestone appearance; in some individuals the keratoderma is more focal. There may be associated skin thickening and hyperpigmentation on the knuckles, knees, and elbows.
Teeth and ability to sweat are normal, as are physical growth and psychomotor development.
Prevalence
HED2 is relatively common in the French-Canadian population of southwest Quebec [Kibar et al 2000]. The condition has also been reported in the US, particularly in Vermont, upstate New York, and Louisiana among communities of French-Canadian ancestry as well as among populations of African, Chinese, French, Indian, Thai, Irish, Malaysian, Scottish, Spanish, and Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry [Radhakrishna et al 1997, Taylor et al 1998, Kibar et al 2000, Zhang et al 2003, Baris et al 2008].