Genetic / Chromosomal Syndromes
ICD-11 Classification of Genetic & Chromosomal Syndromes
In ICD-11, genetic and chromosomal syndromes sit mainly in Chapter 20 (Developmental anomalies, LA00–LD9Z), with chromosomal abnormalities under LD40–LD44. ICD-11 is multi-axial: the syndromic/aetiological code is post-coordinated with associated conditions (e.g. 6A00 disorders of intellectual development) and an ICF functioning profile, which is what drives developmental therapy.
Genetic and chromosomal syndromes don't sit in one tidy ICD-11 box — they thread across structural anomaly, aetiology and functioning, and knowing where to look is half the coding.
In short
In ICD-11, genetic and chromosomal syndromes are classified principally under Chapter 20 — Developmental anomalies (codes LA00–LD9Z), which covers chromosomal abnormalities (e.g. LD40–LD44 for trisomies and monosomies such as Down syndrome, LD40.0) and recognised malformation and monogenic syndromes. ICD-11 is fundamentally a multi-axial system: a single child is described by the structural/aetiological code (Chapter 20), any associated condition (epilepsy, congenital heart disease, intellectual developmental disorder under 6A00), and — crucially for therapy — their functioning profile described via the WHO ICF, not by a diagnostic label alone.The classification, briefly
For clinical and research precision, three layers matter:- The syndromic/aetiological code — Chapter 20 Developmental anomalies. Chromosomal numerical and structural anomalies, microdeletion/microduplication syndromes and named monogenic syndromes are located here, with extension codes available to capture causative genes or specific aberrations where confirmed.
- Associated clinical conditions — coded separately and concurrently. Where there is cognitive impact, Disorders of intellectual development (6A00) in Chapter 06 is applied alongside the syndrome; sensory, cardiac, neurological or epileptic comorbidities each carry their own codes.
- Functioning — ICD-11 is designed to operate with the ICF, so two children sharing one chromosomal code can present with very different support needs. For developmental therapy this functional descriptor — not the syndrome name — drives the plan.
A practical note: many specific syndromes are not individually enumerated and are captured through the combination of the chromosomal/anomaly category plus extension and aetiology codes. Always verify the precise stem against the live ICD-11 browser, as post-coordination is expected.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a code, a form or an app. For children with a confirmed genetic or chromosomal syndrome, our model reads the functioning profile across communication, cognition, motor, social and self-care domains and translates it into a measurable plan. Explore our developmental therapy pathways and the wider [Pinnacle approach](/) to syndrome-associated developmental support.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 for Mortality and Morbidity Statistics, Chapter 20 (Developmental anomalies) and Chapter 06; WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) as the companion functioning framework.Next step — Have a confirmed or suspected syndrome and want a functioning-based plan? Connect your patient with a Pinnacle clinician.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for the gap between a confirmed syndromic code and the child's actual functioning — two children with the same chromosomal code can need very different support, so code the ICF profile alongside the diagnosis.
Try this at home
When coding a syndrome, always pair the Chapter 20 stem with relevant extension and associated-condition codes, and verify the exact stem on the live ICD-11 browser before finalising.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Where are chromosomal syndromes like Down syndrome coded in ICD-11?
Chromosomal numerical anomalies sit in Chapter 20 (Developmental anomalies), with trisomy 21 / Down syndrome under LD40.0. Associated intellectual impact is coded concurrently under 6A00, Disorders of intellectual development.
Is there a single ICD-11 code for every genetic syndrome?
No. ICD-11 is a post-coordinated, multi-axial system. Many specific syndromes are captured by combining a Chapter 20 category with extension and aetiology codes rather than a unique stem. Always verify against the live ICD-11 browser.
Why does ICD-11 emphasise functioning alongside the syndrome code?
ICD-11 is designed to work with the WHO ICF. Two children with the same chromosomal code can present very differently, so the functioning profile — not the label — determines support needs and therapy planning.