Published online 10 March 2009
Haematologica, Vol 94, Issue 4, 487-495 doi:10.3324/haematol.13592
Copyright © 2009 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
Diagnosis of Fanconi anemia in patients with bone marrow failure
Fernando O. Pinto1,2,
Thierry Leblanc3,
Delphine Chamousset1,
Gwenaelle Le Roux1,
Benoit Brethon3,
Bruno Cassinat4,
Jérôme Larghero5,
Jean-Pierre de Villartay6,
Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet7,
André Baruchel3,
Gérard Socié2,
Eliane Gluckman2,
Jean Soulier1
1 Team "Genome Rearrangement and Cancer", APHP Hematology Laboratory, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris; INSERM U728 and U944, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris; and Université Denis Diderot - Paris 7, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris
2 Bone Marrow Transplant Unit, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris
3 Pediatric Hematology Department, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris
4 AP-HP, Cell Biology Unit, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris
5 APHP, Cell Therapy Unit, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris
6 INSERM U768, Hôpital Necker, Paris
7 Department of Genetics, Curie Institute, Paris, France
Correspondence: Jean Soulier, MD, PhD, Hematology Laboratory APHP, INSERM U944, Université Denis Diderot, Hôpital Saint-Louis, 1, Av Claude Vellefaux, 75010 Paris, France. E-mail:jean.soulier{at}sls.aphp.fr

ABSTRACT
Background: Patients with bone marrow failure and undiagnosed underlying
Fanconi anemia may experience major toxicity if given standard-dose
conditioning regimens for hematopoietic stem cell transplant.
Due to clinical variability and/or potential emergence of genetic
reversion with hematopoietic somatic mosaicism, a straightforward
Fanconi anemia diagnosis can be difficult to make, and diagnostic
strategies combining different assays in addition to classical
breakage tests in blood may be needed.
Design and Methods: We evaluated Fanconi anemia diagnosis on blood lymphocytes and skin fibroblasts from a cohort of 87 bone marrow failure patients (55 children and 32 adults) with no obvious full clinical picture of Fanconi anemia, by performing a combination of chromosomal breakage tests, FANCD2-monoubiquitination assays, a new flow cytometry-based mitomycin C sensitivity test in fibroblasts, and, when Fanconi anemia was diagnosed, complementation group and mutation analyses. The mitomycin C sensitivity test in fibroblasts was validated on control Fanconi anemia and non-Fanconi anemia samples, including other chromosomal instability disorders.
Results: When this diagnosis strategy was applied to the cohort of bone marrow failure patients, 7 Fanconi anemia patients were found (3 children and 4 adults). Classical chromosomal breakage tests in blood detected 4, but analyses on fibroblasts were necessary to diagnose 3 more patients with hematopoietic somatic mosaicism. Importantly, Fanconi anemia was excluded in all the other patients who were fully evaluated.
Conclusions: In this large cohort of patients with bone marrow failure our results confirmed that when any clinical/biological suspicion of Fanconi anemia remains after chromosome breakage tests in blood, based on physical examination, history or inconclusive results, then further evaluation including fibroblast analysis should be made. For that purpose, the flow-based mitomycin C sensitivity test here described proved to be a reliable alternative method to evaluate Fanconi anemia phenotype in fibroblasts. This global strategy allowed early and accurate confirmation or rejection of Fanconi anemia diagnosis with immediate clinical impact for those who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplant.
Key words: Fanconi anemia, inherited aplastic anemia, bone marrow failure, fibroblasts, somatic mosaicism.

Introduction
Bone marrow failure syndromes (BMF) are a heterogeneous group
of acquired or inherited diseases, which characteristically
feature decreased production of hematopoietic cells in the marrow.
1–3 Inherited diseases include Fanconi anemia (FA), dyskeratosis
congenita, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome, Diamond-Blackfan anemia
and amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia.
2,3 FA patients often,
but not always, present with a combination of various congenital
abnormalities (short stature; thumb and radius deformities;
microphtalmia and
peculiar facies; skin hyperpigmentation, such
as
café-au-lait spots; cardiac, renal, genitourinary
and/or other malformations).
2,4–8 Most FA patients will
develop BMF throughout the course of the disease, usually during
their first and second decades of life
9,10 and, for the majority
of patients, the suspicion of FA will only be made after the
onset of pancytopenia. There is also a strong predisposition
to hematologic and epithelial malignancies,
9–13 with cumulative
probabilities of an FA patient developing MDS/leukemia being
approximately 40% by age 30 years, and a few patients can present
with acute leukemia or myelodysplasia at diagnosis.
10 It is
crucial, for family counseling and treatment, to identify patients
with FA as early as possible. Patients with BMF who happen to
have underlying undiagnosed FA will not respond to immunosuppression
therapy, which is usually given to treat patients with idiopathic
aplastic anemia.
14 Moreover, due to a hypersensitivity to chemotherapy
agents, patients with FA will often die of toxicity if given
conventional conditioning for HSCT and, therefore, less myeloablative
regimens have been used in this population.
15–17 In addition,
being at higher risk of developing malignancies, patients with
FA will also need appropriate cancer surveillance throughout
life.
11–13 Due to the high variety of genes and mutations
(13 FA genes have been identified, the most frequently involved
being
FANCA, -
C, -
G and
-D2),
18–21 a single genetic test
cannot be used as a first approach for FA diagnosis in unselected
BMF patients. The biological diagnosis of FA is primarily based
on the exquisite sensitivity of peripheral blood lymphocytes
(PBL) to DNA interstrand cross-linking chemicals such as diepoxybutane
(DEB) or mitomycin C (MMC). The chromosomal breakage test with
these agents is the technique of reference for diagnosing FA
22 and, in the vast majority of cases, a precise diagnosis can
be made with careful history, physical examination and a positive
chromosomal breakage test on PBL. Other tests carried out on
PBL include cell cycle analysis
23 and evaluation of FANCD2 monoubiquitination
(which can positively diagnose FA-core patients).
24 However,
all these tests can be falsely negative in patients who develop
hematopoietic reversion and somatic mosaicism. Hematopoietic
reversion occurs when, after a spontaneous genetic event in
a hematopoietic stem cell (i.e., reverse point mutation or intragenic
recombination), one FA allele is corrected, with a consequent
recovery of a normal or subnormal protein activity and cellular
phenotype.
25,26 Because there has been no evidence that this
same phenomenon could happen in primary skin fibroblasts, these
cells have been used to overcome false negative results in PBL
due to somatic mosaicism.
27–30
Here, we describe a cohort of 87 patients with BMF and no strong clinical evidence of FA, who were subject to a combination of classic and innovative FA tests on PBL and on primary skin fibroblasts, aiming to reveal unexpected FA cases and rule out this diagnosis in others. Clinical presentation and biological confirmation of 7 FA patients identified are detailed, and strategies for a comprehensive and precise diagnosis of FA in patients presenting with BMF are discussed.

Design and Methods
Patients characteristics and data collection
From February 2002 to January 2007, 87 consecutive patients
were included in this cohort. They were either seen at (n=75)
or samples referred to (n=12) Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris.
In both cases, at least one medical appointment with complete
history and physical examination were performed by FA-experienced
physicians and data recorded. Informed consent was obtained
from the patients and/or their relatives. The study was approved
by the Review board of the Fédération dHématologie,
Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris, France. Patients included
in the cohort were children or adults with bone marrow failure
(at least one isolated or combined peripheral cytopenias and
hypoplastic/aplastic bone marrow aspirates/biopsies), but without
a full clinical picture of FA based on commonly seen findings
and subjective impression of the evaluating physician. This
included BMF patients (i) without any evidence of an associated
underlying etiology, (ii) with only an isolated non-specific
positive sign in history or physical examination (i.e. isolated
short stature, or café-au-lait spots, or history of consanguinity),
and (iii) patients with suspected genetic syndromes (based on
clinical signs and/or family history), probably other than FA,
who were tested to rule out the diagnosis of FA. For all cases,
cytopenia was defined as peripheral blood Hb<10.0 g/dL, neutrophils<
x10
9/L
and/or platelets<100
x10
9/L.
9 Marrow hypoplasia/aplasia was
defined based on standard histopathological diagnostic criteria.
31 Patients further identified as having hypoplastic myelodysplasia
(MDS) were also analyzed. The cohort included 49 female and
38 male patients (55 children and 32 adults) and, at diagnosis,
median age was 15.0 years (range 0.6–50.8), median WBC
count was 2.9
x10
9/L (range 0.2–9.7), median neutrophil
counts 0.7
x10
9/L (range 0.02– 5.9), median hemoglobin
8.7 g/dL (range 2.9–15.9) and median platelet levels were
40
x10
9/L (range 1.2–423). Clinical details are given in
Table 1, and additional details in the
Online Supplementary Tables S1 and S2.
Of note, during the period of the study, 51 other patients with
an obvious or a previously known diagnosis of FA were firstly
evaluated in our center. Considering that the diagnosis was
not questionable in these cases, these patients were not included
in the present study, the aim of which was to address the question
of unexpected FA diagnosis.
Fanconi anemia biological diagnosis
Peripheral blood (in the 87 patients) and skin biopsies (in 64 out of 87) were collected. Fragments of skin were obtained with a minimally invasive 3-mm punch using standard techniques32 and skin fibroblasts were cultured as previously described.29
The following FA tests were used: (i) classic chromosomal breakage test on PBL, (ii) FANCD2 monoubiquitination by Western blot on PBL (in order to evaluate the ability of the FA core complex to monoubiquitinate FANCD2, and the level of expression of the FANCD2 protein), (iii) FANCD2 monoubiquitination by Western Blot on primary skin fibroblasts (in order to overcome the possibility of revertant cases which would give negative PBL tests), (iv) MMC-sensitivity test, flow-cytometry based, on skin fibroblasts (in order to evaluate the possibility of downstream FA groups which FANCD2 immunoblot would not detect), and finally, when FA was diagnosed, (v) retroviral FA complementation group and (vi) mutation analysis.
Chromosomal breakages on phytohemaglutinin (PHA)-stimulated PBL, FANCD2 immunoblot on PHA-stimulated PBL and on primary skin fibroblasts were performed as previously described.29 Two distinct fibroblast lines were grown in separate wells from the same skin biopsy and further tested in most cases, in order to overcome potential in vitro FA reversion of fibroblasts (which was not found in FA patients of this study, nor in fibroblasts from a larger FA patient cohort, (D. Chamousset and J. Soulier, unpublished data, 2008).
A new flow-cytometry based, MMC-sensitivity test on fibroblasts, was performed as follows. At Day 0, growing primary fibroblasts were trypsinized, washed, and cells were replated in 24 multi-well plate at 105 cells per well in 1/mL RPMI-FCS at 37°C at 5% CO2. At Day 1, Mitomycin C (MMC, Sigma Aldrich, www.sig-maaldrich.com/) was added at concentrations of 0, 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 10, and 25 ng/mL. At Day 4 (72 hours exposure to MMC), cells were washed, trypsinized and harvested (neither permeabilization nor fixation). Propidium iodide (PI, Sigma Aldrich) was added at a final concentration of 10 mg/mL in PBS-FCS, and the fluorescence was immediately analyzed by flow cytometry after gating of the cells by standard two-parameter forward scatter (FSC; size) and side scatter (SSC; granularity), using a FACSCalibur Flow Cytometer and CellQuest analysis system (BD Biosciences, www.bdbiosciences.com). The fraction of dying cells, which allows cellular permeabilization and PI uptake,33 was measured by a shift on FL2. By including healthy and FA control cases in the experiment, comparison of the cell sensitivity to an increasing concentration of MMC clearly discriminates the FA phenotype.
This new flow-based MMC-sensitivity test in fibroblasts was validated by analyzing primary fibroblasts of 34 molecularly-proven mutated FA cases (25 FA-A, 2 FAG, 1 FA-C, 3 FA-D2, 2 FA-D1/BRCA2, 1 FA-J), including 3 FA patients previously diagnosed with a reversion in blood, and from 10 non-FA control cases including 3 healthy donors having plastic surgery. In all cases, MMC-sensitivity and MMC-resistance, respectively, were as expected (Figure 1). Moreover, primary cells from non-FA chromosome fragility syndromes were tested: Nijmegen syndrome34 (n=2 cases, both NBS1-mutated), dyskeratosis congenita (n=1, TERT-mutated), Seckel syndrome (n=1), VACTERL syndrome (n=2, non BRCA2-mutated), and xeroderma pigmentosum (n=2, both XPC-mutated). A normal MMC-resistant phenotype was found in all these cases, further demonstrating the specificity of this method to accurately diagnose FA (Figure 1).
In the FA patients identified in the BMF cohort, complementation
groups were determined by retroviral transduction as previously
described.
24 FANCA and FANCC mutations, and FANCA deletions,
were searched for in genomic DNA from FA fibroblasts by direct
sequencing and by MLPA analysis (Multiplex ligation-dependent
probe amplification, SALSA KIT P031/P032 FANCA, MRC Holland,
www.mrc-holland.com), respectively. The Rockefeller FA mutation
database (
www.rockefeller.edu/fanconi/mutate/) was used to analyze
the FANC mutations. Somatic reversion was evidenced by comparing
genomic DNA from PBL and fibroblasts.

Results
Results of Fanconi anemia tests in blood
Chromosomal breakage tests on PBL were negative (no increase
in MMC-induced breaks) in 75/87 cases, positive in 3, ambiguous
in 2 cases (significantly more breaks than in normal controls
but less than the usual Fanconi range), and in 7 patients metaphases
could not be obtained. Results of FANCD2 monoubiquitination
by Western Blot on PBL were normal (2-band FANCD2 pattern) in
83/87 cases, and abnormal (single band FA core
pattern, i.e. no FANCD2-L isoform) in 4 including the 3 patients
with breaks and one patient with MDS and ambiguous chromosomal
breakage test (patient H48). In summary, after the biological
evaluation of blood samples, 4 FA patients (H11, H19, H48 and
H61) were diagnosed in the cohort (see flow-chart in
Figure 2).
A patient (H04) with ambiguous breaks and a normal FANCD2 pattern
remained questionable at this point.
Results of Fanconi anemia tests in fibroblasts, including the new flow-based sensitivity test
Primary fibroblasts could be obtained in 64 patients. Results
of FANCD2 tests in fibroblasts were normal in 59/64 cases, and
abnormal (no FANCD2-L isoform, FA core pattern) in 5, including
2 patients (H04 and H38) with hematopoietic reversion who had
a normal pattern in PBL (
Figures 2 and
3). The fibroblasts were
tested using our new flow-based MMC-sensitivity test (after
validation of this method using FA and non-FA controls, including
other chromosomal instability syndromes, see the Methods section
and
Figure 1). MMC-sensitivity results in primary fibroblasts
in the 64 cases were abnormal (hypersensitivity) in 6 cases,
including one downstream patient otherwise undetected (H60),
and normal (MMC-resistant) in the remaining 58. No skin sample
was available for one additional FA patient who had the diagnosis
previously confirmed in blood (H11; breaks and
FA-core pattern).
In summary, after the evaluation of skin fibroblasts, 3 other
FA patients with hematopoietic mosaicism were identified in
this cohort (H04, H38 and H60), in addition to the 4 above-mentioned
who were diagnosed from blood samples (total n=7 FA patients).
With this approach, independently of FA subtype and hematopoietic
reversion, the MMC-sensitivity on fibroblasts was able to ultimately
differentiate a FA from a non-FA patient.
Final diagnoses
After a comprehensive evaluation with thorough clinical evaluation
and a combination of FA tests, patients were given a final diagnosis
(
Table 2).
Seven FA patients were identified in this cohort of 87 patients
with BMF, 3 of them presenting with hematopoietic reversion
and 4 with atypical presentations, including one patient who
was initially thought to have an idiopathic aplastic anemia
with no sign of FA in history or physical examination (
Table 3).
Five of these patients were further assigned to the FA-A group
after retroviral complementation group analysis, one to FA-C,
and based on the FANCD2 test in fibroblasts, the seventh was
considered a
downstream group. Accordingly,
FANCA point mutations
and/or deletions were identified in 5 patients and
FANCC mutations
in one patient. In addition, reverse mutations were determined
by blood versus fibroblast comparative analysis in the 2 FA-A
patients who presented with somatic mosaicism (
Figure 3 and
Table 3). Clinical characteristics and biological findings for
the 7 FA patients identified in this cohort are shown in
Table 3.
FA diagnosis was ruled out in 78 patients (
Table 2). For 52
of these, a final diagnosis of idiopathic aplastic anemia was
retained, including 13 patients with isolated positive signs
in history or physical exam (i.e. isolated short stature,
café-au-lait spots, or history of consanguinity). Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
(PNH) clones, associated acute hepatitis, or medication use
were found in very few cases (
Table 2). Other patients had likely
inherited diagnoses (n=28), including dyskeratosis congenita
in 4 (one of them with the severe Hoyeraal-Hreidarsson form),
Blackfan-Diamond in 2 (initially systematically evaluated to
rule out FA diagnosis), Seckel syndrome in 1, and probable
uncategorized inherited syndromes in the remaining 21. Characteristics of
the BMF presentation, biological results, and the final diagnoses
for patients who were likely to have an underlying inherited
condition (n=30, 2 FA), and for those with only one isolated
positive clinical finding (n=18, 4 FA), are shown in
Online Supplementary Tables S1 and S2, respectively.

Discussion
Although FA has been known for decades and the main involved
genes and proteins have now been described, making a correct
and early diagnosis can still be difficult. FA patients who
dont present with the association of the most common
clinical findings and those, in rare occasions, who have fully
negative FA tests in PBL due to hematopoietic reversion can
still be undiagnosed and not be offered the best available treatment
in a timely manner. This is particularly true for patients who
will be treated with HSCT and for whom ruling out a diagnosis
of FA is imperative in order to avoid the excess of toxicity
with conventional conditioning regimens. Here we evaluated a
series of 87 patients with BMF who did not have a clear initial
diagnosis of FA (based on history and physical exam) and to
whom classical and innovative FA diagnostic tests were offered.
The hypothesis was that we would be able to find some FA patients
in this population of non-typical Fanconi BMF
syndromes and, importantly, to definitely rule out such a diagnosis
in others, ultimately opening the discussion about the optimal
strategy for FA diagnosis/exclusion in BMF patients. This study
focused on BMF patients with questionable diagnosis, a fairly
common clinical situation, and therefore patients firstly referred
to our center with previously established or obvious diagnosis
of FA were excluded from the present analysis (n=51 over the
same period of the study), as were those presenting with isolated
physical signs or early-onset cancer but without BMF. To perform
the evaluation, we used a large panel of FA tests, including
functional and molecular analyses on blood and skin fibroblasts.
We developed a new flow-cytometry-based MMC-sensitivity assay
that we found highly sensitive and specific, including distinguishing
FA from other DNA fragility syndromes (
Figure 1). Chromosome
breakage, FANCD2 test, cell cycle analysis, or growth inhibition
tests have been reported in fibroblasts and can also be used
to diagnose FA when somatic mosaicism is suspected in blood.
27–30,35 In our cohort of 87 patients with BMF, 7 FA cases were identified,
including 3 with hematopoietic reversion. It is possible that
this relatively high incidence of FA patients found in this
study may be partially inherent to our status of reference center
institution, where cases with previously non-established diagnosis
tend to be referred to for evaluation. In the 7 FA patients,
3 were children, including 2 who did not present with obvious
clinical signs for a FA diagnosis. In fact, patient H04 had
one single
café-au-lait spot as only abnormality (and
also had hematopoietic reversion in lymphocytes), and patient
H11 did seem to have an idiopathic aplastic anemia without any
additional clinical sign. On the other hand, the third child
diagnosed with FA in this cohort (H60) presented with multiple
malformations and clinical findings resembling an inherited
syndrome other than FA (in addition to the BMF and very short
stature). Since she displayed a clear MMC hypersensitivity pattern
on several experiments and normal
FANCD2 immunoblot test on
fibroblasts, a diagnosis of
FA downstream group was tentatively
retained. Four other FA patients were diagnosed in adulthood.
Patient H38 did have, retrospectively, findings suggestive of
the disease, but even after evaluation in various other hematology
services and laboratories in the country, her diagnosis was
still delayed for years due to the late age at presentation
(47 years) and the repeatedly full negative chromosomal breakage
tests on PBL. With our evaluation, a definite FA diagnosis was
established in this patient (FA core pattern and MMC-sensitivity
in fibroblasts, and two
FANCA mutations in fibroblast, with
complete reversion of one allele in blood, see
Table 3). Three
other patients (H61, H19, and H48) remained undiagnosed until
their 2
nd, 3
rd and 5
th decades of life respectively, due to
the scarcity of positive clinical findings in history and physical
exam, and long-standing absence of hematologic complications
(
Table 3). In these cases, the suspicion of FA was only made
after the onset of the hematologic disease. It is possible that
delayed FA diagnosis to adulthood was related to somatic mosaicism
and/or to hypomorphic FANC mutations.
36
Importantly, this diagnostic strategy ruled out an FA diagnosis in all of the other patients who had skin samples available, including those who had some evidence of an inherited condition associated to the BMF. Twenty-one patients retained a final diagnosis of an uncategorized inherited syndrome based on the multiplicity of physical exam findings associated to BMF, and/or the positive family history, and also on failing to formally fulfill clinical diagnostic criteria for a known phenotype (Table 2 and Online Supplementary Table S1). Further evaluation of patients who share similar phenotypes in this group may provide us with links to new syndromes and genes involved in the development of the bone marrow failure. Fifty-two other patients had a final diagnosis of idiopathic aplastic anemia, including 10 who were questionable before our fibroblast evaluation due to isolated signs (Table 2 and Online Supplementary Table S2). Seventeen patients in this cohort were further treated with HSCT for the bone marrow failure and, because the diagnosis of FA had been formally excluded after the PBL and fibroblast evaluation we performed, appropriate standard conditioning regimens were given. Sixteen of them are alive and well, with a median follow-up of 18.3 months (range 0.9–43.2). The additional FA patient H11/EGF003, who seemed to have an idiopathic aplastic anemia during the initial clinical evaluation but turned out to have positive FA tests, received an adapted dose-reduced conditioning regimen for her HSCT.
Finally, the following questions were raised: (i) should FA screening tests, such as chromosomal breakages on PBL, be performed for all patients with BMF syndromes, including those with a likely diagnosis of idiopathic aplastic anemia, to detect FA cases with atypical presentations? Due to the existence of rare FA patients who present as idiopathic aplastic anemia without any FA clinical signs, i.e. patient H11 in this cohort, it appears that FA should indeed be investigated in all BMF patients, as previously suggested.2,6 The chromosomal breakage test in blood is effective and sufficient to differentiate FA from idiopathic aplastic anemia without FA clinical signs or familial history. The FANCD2 test is useful to positively diagnose FA, but it fails to detect the very rare downstream FA patients. Fibroblast tests are efficient but demanding (skin biopsy and the results delayed by 4–6 weeks cell growth), so they are not used as first-line screening. (ii) should specific fibroblast analysis be performed when a clinical suspicion of FA remains after negative or inconclusive tests in blood, in order to detect somatic mosaicism or definitely exclude FA? As expected from reported cases of mosaicism in FA,27–30 we found in this series of 87 BMF patients that the fibroblast analysis was decisive to either confirm or exclude the diagnosis of FA when a suspicion of FA remained after negative or inconclusive tests in PBL. For that purpose, the new flow-based MMC sensitivity test here described proved to be a reliable alternative method to evaluate FA phenotype in fibroblasts. Such patients could then be counseled and treated accordingly, especially when considering immunosuppression therapy, HSCT, and further monitoring of cancer predisposition. Patients with a likely inherited condition other than FA can also be screened for other genetic disorders, and ultimately, new previously uncategorized inherited syndromes associated with BMF may be identified (see patients in Online Supplementary Table S1).
Figure 4 summarizes our current proposed diagnostic strategy for evaluating FA in BMF.
In conclusion, a careful and specialized evaluation should be
performed in patients where a suspicion of FA remains after
initial testing, due to positive history, physical exam findings,
and/or inconclusive chromosome tests in blood. Such evaluation
should be done in reference centers where a complete set of
tests, including fibroblasts analyses (when necessary), appropriate
FA and non-FA controls, and mutation analyses are available,
with immediate clinical impact for patients with BMF who need
an HSCT.

Acknowledgments
we thank the patients and their families, and the AFMF (Association
Française de la Maladie de Fanconi) for their support.
We thank C. Oudot, C. Kerdudo, K. Boudjedir, J. Fernandes, M.
Santos, Y. Skvortsova, A. Devergie, H. Esperou, R. de Latour,
P. Ribaud, M. Robin, V. Rocha, L. Degos, E. Raffoux, B. Lescoeur,
M. Ouachée, K. Yacouben, and all other physicians and
nurses from French pediatric, genetic and/or hematologic centers
who take care of patients. We are grateful to H. Dastot, C.
Dubois dEnghien, and A. Lauge for helpful contributions.
We are grateful to H. Joenje (Vrije University, Amsterdam) for
providing us with FA-J and FA-D1/BRCA2 primary fibroblasts.

Footnotes
Authorship and Disclosures
FOP: study design, gathering/analysis of clinical data and writing of the paper; DC, GLR, BC, JL, JPV: biological experiments; DS-L: mutation analysis; TL, BB, AB: study design and patient clinical care/follow-up; GS, EG: study design, patient clinical care/follow-up and writing of the paper; JS: study design, gathering/analysis of data, and writing the paper. Thanks to Helen Walden for proofreading the manuscript.
The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
The online version of this article contains a supplementary appendix.
Funding: our center is supported by the French Government (Direction de lHospitalisation et de lOrganisation des Soins) as Centre de Référence Maladies Rares Aplasies médullaires constitutionnelles (coordination G. Socié), and by the Réseau INCa des Maladies Cassantes de lADN (coordination D. Stoppa-Lyonnet and A. Sarasin). This work was supported by a national grant PHRC AOM05066 Diagnostic de la maladie de Fanconi.
Received for publication July 1, 2008.
Revision received November 20, 2008.
Accepted for publication November 24, 2008.

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