Principal Anomalies   Study A  Study B  Study C 
    [8,9]  [7] [10]
Head and Face (a)        
  Hemifacial microsomia* - 83% 84%
  Macrocephaly - - 5%
  Microcephaly - 8% -
  Cleft lip/palate 15%-22%   18%
  Macrostomia/ facial cleft 17%-62%   13%
  Facial nerve palsy 10%-45%   -
Ear Anotia or microtia*  66%-99% 100% b) 70%
  Preauricular tags* 34%-61%   67%
  Preauricular sinus/pit 6%-9%   7%
  Hearing loss 50%-66% c) 85% 68%
Ocular Epibulbar dermoids 4%-35% 22% 31%
  Coloboma of the upper eyelid 12%-25% 8% 11%
  Microphthalmia - 10% 12%
  Orbital dystopia 15%-43% - -
  Lacrimal duct atresia/stenosis 11%-14% - -
Velopharyngeal insufficiency   35%-55% - -
Vertebral anomalies   16%-60% d) 53% 35%
Congenital heart defects   4%-33% 15% 27%
Anomalies of extremities   3%-21% 12% -
Developmental delay   - 9% e) 14%
Central nervous system anomalies   5%-18% 17% f) 2% f)
Urogenital anomalies   4%-15% 18%    7% g)
Pulmonary anomalies   1%-15% - -
Gastrointestinal anomalies   2%-12% - -
a) mandibular, malar, maxillary, or facial muscular hypoplasia; b) described as microtia/preauricular tag; c) conductive hearing loss; d) vertebral/rib; e) delay of speech development; f) brain anomalies; g) renal anomalies;
* minimal diagnostic criteria for OAVS
Table 1: Comparison of the prevalence of phenotypes from 158 published cases [7-10]. A- Summary of phenotype prevalence rates from 19 reports published between 1983 and 1996 as described by Cousley & Calvert, 1997 [8], and adapted by Heike & Hing, 2009 [9]. B- Clinical evaluation of 53 patients by Tasse et al, 2005 [7]; C- Analysis of a cohort of 86 patients by Rooryck et al, 2010 [10].