OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to conduct a systematic
assessment of psychiatric illness in patients diagnosed with velo-
cardio-facial syndrome, a genetic syndrome that involves over 40 somatic
anomalies, learning disabilities, and behavioral disorders and is
associated with a microdeletion on chromosome 22q11. METHOD: Subjects were
referred for psychiatric diagnostic evaluation without regard to age or
previous psychiatric history. In order to establish DSM-III-R consensus
clinical diagnoses for patients who ranged in age from 5 to 34 years, the
Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents--Revised or the
Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) was used. A review of
available medical and psychiatric records and a clinical interview
performed by two research psychiatrists to validate specific symptoms and
syndromes reported in the Diagnostic Interview for Children and
Adolescents--Revised and the SCID were used to elucidate the chronological
appearance and duration of symptoms. RESULTS: Sixty-four percent (N = 16 of
25) of this unselected series of patients with velo-cardio-facial syndrome
met DSM-III-R criteria for a spectrum of bipolar disorders with full
syndromal onset in late childhood or early adolescence (mean age at onset =
12 years, SD = 3). In addition, 20% (N = 5) met DSM-III-R criteria for
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), while 16% (N = 4) met
criteria for attention deficit disorder without hyperactivity. In contrast
to previous reports of a high prevalence of schizophrenia, none of the
patients was diagnosed with schizophrenia, and only four had psychotic
symptoms during a phase of their illness, all in their 20s or 30s.
CONCLUSIONS: Given that the prevalence of bipolar disorder in the general
population is estimated to be 1.5% and that the average age at onset is 24,
these findings support an unusually strong association between
velo-cardio-facial syndrome and early-onset bipolar disorder and suggest
that a gene deleted at the 22q11 chromosomal locus may be involved in its
pathogenesis. If confirmed, these findings may provide a new and fruitful
line of investigation into the molecular basis of bipolar spectrum
disorders.Abstract Teaser