Early-onset Marfan syndrome (eoMFS) is a severe and rare form of Marfan syndrome characterized by severe atrioventricular valve insufficiency developing before or shortly after birth. It is unclear which factors (interventions and/or genotype) influence survival. Forty-one individuals with eoMFS with a fibrillin-1 gene (FBN1) variant in exon 24-32 (CRCh37) were included. At the last follow-up, 14/41 (34%) were alive (8 months-18 years) and 27/41 (66%) were deceased. Median age of death was 1 month and 88% of the deaths occurred before 5 months of age. More individuals alive past the age of 16 months versus those who were deceased before that age had undergone cardiovascular surgery at an older age (13 months, range 3-72, vs. 2 months, range 2-2, p = 0.03). Survival was better in those with single amino acid substitutions/small in-frame deletions than in those with large in-frame deletions (p = 0.007), but variants involving a cysteine substitution in an EGF-like domain versus those involving other amino acids did not significantly influence survival. EoMFS ranges from a (pre-)neonatal life-threatening disorder to a disorder with enhanced survival, creating a window for cardiovascular surgery. Individuals with single amino acid substitutions/small in-frame deletions had better survival compared to those with variants significantly impacting exon 24-32 length.
Keywords: Fibrillin‐1; Marfan syndrome; cardiac valve annuloplasty; genotype–phenotype correlations; heart defects congenital; mitral valve insufficiency; prognosis; tricuspid valve insufficiency.
© 2025 The Author(s). Clinical Genetics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.