Epidemiology of brachydactyly type A3 in China: a nationwide multicentre population-based study among children aged 3-17 years

中国A3型短指畸形的流行病学:一项针对3-17岁儿童的全国多中心人群研究

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of brachydactyly type A3 (BDA3) and its associated epiphysial development abnormalities in Chinese children aged 3-17 years, and to explore differences based on gender, region and urban-rural demographics. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: The study was conducted across 14 provinces (28 survey sites) in China, as part of a nationwide investigation on skeletal maturation. The population was selected using multistage stratified randomised cluster sampling. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 17 850 children (8856 boys and 8994 girls) aged 3-17 years participated. The cohort was drawn from a large-scale survey conducted between 2019 and 2021. Selection criteria included children with no visible clinodactyly or hand function impairments. METHODS: Non-dominant hand-wrist radiographs were obtained using a portable X-ray device. A retrospective analysis of these radiographs was performed to identify BDA3 and epiphysial development abnormalities. Prevalence rates were calculated and compared across gender, regional and urban-rural groups. RESULTS: The overall prevalence of BDA3 was 10.0%, with a higher prevalence in girls (12.9% vs 7.1%; p<0.001). The northern region exhibited a higher prevalence compared with the southern region (11.5% vs 8.6%; p<0.001). No significant differences were observed between urban and rural areas (10.3% vs 9.8%; p=0.32). Among the BDA3 phenotypes, brachymesophalangia-5 with cone-epiphysis of mid-5 (BMP5) and BMP5 alone had prevalences of 3.6% and 6.4%, respectively. Both phenotypes were more common in girls compared with boys (p<0.001 for both). CONCLUSIONS: This nationwide, multicentre study provides the first national epidemiologic data on BDA3 and associated epiphysial features in Chinese children and adolescents, establishing a prevalence of 10.0%. This baseline supports counselling that a straight, well-functioning short fifth finger is a common anatomic variant and may help reduce unnecessary concern.

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