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. 2022 Sep 2;19(6):1752–1771. doi: 10.1007/s13311-022-01277-w

Table 1.

Revised diagnostic criteria for neurofibromatosis type 1: an international consensus recommendation (NF1) [19]

Revised diagnostic criteria for neurofibromatosis type 1: an international consensus recommendation
A: The diagnostic criteria for NF1 are met in an individual who does not have a parent diagnosed with NF1 if two or more of the following are present:
       • Six or more café-au-lait macules over 5 mm in greatest diameter in prepubertal individuals and over 15 mm in greatest diameter in postpubertal individuals a
       • Freckling in the axillary or inguinal region a
       • Two or more neurofibromas of any type or one plexiform neurofibroma
       • Optic pathway glioma
       • Two or more iris Lisch nodules identified by slit lamp examination or two or more choroidal abnormalities (CAs)—defined as bright, patchy nodules imaged by optical coherence tomography (OCT)/near-infrared reflectance (NIR) imaging
       • A distinctive osseous lesion such as sphenoid dysplasia, b anterolateral bowing of the tibia, or pseudarthrosis of a long bone 
       • A heterozygous pathogenic NF1 variant with a variant allele fraction of 50% in apparently normal tissue such as white blood cells
B: A child of a parent who meets the diagnostic criteria specified in A merits a diagnosis of NF1 if one or more of the criteria in A are present

aIf only café-au-lait macules and freckling are present, the diagnosis is most likely NF1 but exceptionally the person might have another diagnosis such as Legius syndrome. At least one of the two pigmentary findings (café-au-lait macules or freckling) should be bilateral

bSphenoid wing dysplasia is not a separate criterion in case of an ipsilateral orbital plexiform neurofibroma