Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, type 4

Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, type 4 is a connective_tissue genetic disease caused by Autosomal dominant inheritance; Autosomal recessive inheritance variants in COL3A1. It is not placed in the rankable burden order: only 1 of five axes are scored (cut: three of five), so the remaining 4 stay open [O], not guessed. Mechanism, scored axes, and treatment follow below.

Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, type 4 is inherited as Autosomal dominant inheritance; Autosomal recessive inheritance and acts by haploinsufficiency ([L]). Of the five burden axes, 1 are scored (O) and 4 are open [O] (P, S, M, D); because fewer than three are scored the disease is reported as “not placed — insufficient axis coverage” (rank null), not ranked on partial data.

Gene, inheritance, and molecular mechanism

Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, type 4 is inherited as Autosomal dominant inheritance; Autosomal recessive inheritance [L] and is classified mechanistically as haploinsufficiency [L]. COL3A1 encodes type III collagen, a major collagen of arterial and hollow-organ walls. A dominant-negative or null defect weakens those walls.

Inheritance source: medgen:esummary:ModeOfInheritance:2026-06-17. Mechanism source: clingen:HI_score_3:2026-06-17; genes=COL3A1; PMID:11577371,24650746,24922459. These are observed, cited inputs; the classification is the reproducible analysis layer (C-D1).

In-scope clinical involvement

Vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome presents with thin translucent skin, easy bruising, and characteristic facies, and is defined by the risk of spontaneous arterial, intestinal, or uterine rupture.

Organ system (HPO rollup)terms
respiratory system12
cardiovascular system11
musculoskeletal system11
integument8
genitourinary system5
head or neck5

Organ systems [L] from HPO phenotype.hpoa v2026-06-06 (OMIM 120180,130050); P-aspect terms rolled up to HP:0000118 organ-system categories via hp.obo.

Burden axes and why this disease is not placed

Burden axisvaluegrade
Onset earliness (O)1.0000[L]
Progression (P)[O]
Symptom severity (S)[O]
Mortality (M)[O]
Disability (D)[O]

For transparency the partial composite over the 1 scored axis/axes is raw_burden = 1.0000, but it is not used to rank the disease (below the ≥ 3-axis cut). The open axes (progression, severity, mortality, disability) are graded [O] with a named obstacle, never imputed.

The natural-history registry passes lift onset (Orphanet, R6) and disability (GBD 2013 disability weights, R7) to registry [L] where an entity-anchored mapping exists, lift severity (HPO Severity-modifier subtree, R8) where the dominant sequela is annotated, and lift progression (curated PMC open-access literature with a frozen-R3-derived tier, R9) where a cited disease-level magnitude for the dominant untreated sequela exists. For some diseases the added disability axis was enough to cross the ≥ 3-axis cut and enter the placed residual order; for this one it was not — and its dominant sequela carries no open HPO severity annotation, so no registry severity tier is available (the open HPO severity annotations elsewhere are feature-level; the OMIM clinical synopsis, the disease-level alternative, is API-key-gated and the key is unobtainable for an individual researcher). Scoring three or more axes at registry grade (via published functional & survival literature) would let this disease enter the rankable residual order; until then it is reported here, never imputed.

Established treatment

The established disease-directed approach is celiprolol for arterial-event reduction with vascular surveillance; no definitive disease-modifying therapy. Mechanistically: celiprolol reduces arterial-wall stress (limited-evidence) [L]. Its effect on natural history is classified disease-modifying (partial) (efficacy offset e = 0.3000, residual factor R_treat = 0.7000); this offset would apply to the burden score once the disease is placed.

Evidence tier: accession-dated to the GeneReviews NBK1494 Management section [L] (initial posting September 2, 1999; last revision April 10, 2025; retrieved 2026-06-18; corroborating term(s): “vascular, surveillance”).