Genetic screening in adolescents with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome
Date
2013Author
Mir, Sevgi
WASILEWSKA, Anna
DROZDZ, Dorota
SZCZEPANSKA, Maria
FIRSZT-ADAMCZYK, Agnieszka
DUSEK, Jiri
Simonetti, Giacomo D.
GOK, Faysal
GHEISSARI, Alaleh
EMMA, Francesco
Krmar, Rafael T.
FISCHBACH, Michel
Printza, Nikoleta
SIMKOVA, Eva
MELE, Caterina
GHIGGERI, Gian Marco
SCHAEFER, Franz
Emre, Sevinc
Caliskan, Salim
Jankauskiene, Augustina
SERNA HIGUITA, Lina Maria
ARDISSINO, Gianluigi
Ozkaya, Ozan
KUZMA-MROCZKOWSKA, Elzbieta
Soylemezoglu, Oguz
RANCHIN, Bruno
MEDYNSKA, Anna
TKACZYK, Marcin
PECO-ANTIC, Amira
Akil, Ipek
JARMOLINSKI, Tomasz
IATROPOULOS, Paraskevas
Lipska-Zietkiewicz, Beata S.
MARANTA, Ramona
CARIDI, Gianluca
ÖZALTIN, FATİH
Anarat, Ali
Balat, Ayse
GELLERMANN, Jutta
TRAUTMANN, Agnes
ERDOGAN, Ozlem
SAEED, Bassam
BOGDANOVIC, Radovan
AZOCAR, Marta
BALASZ-CHMIELEWSKA, Irena
BENETTI, Elisa
MELK, Anette
Ertan, Pelin
Baskin, Esra
JARDIM, Helena
DAVITAIA, Tinatin
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Genetic screening paradigms for congenital and infantile nephrotic syndrome are well established; however, screening in adolescents has received only minor attention. To help rectify this, we analyzed an unselected adolescent cohort of the international PodoNet registry to develop a rational screening approach based on 227 patients with nonsyndromic steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome aged 10-20 years. Of these, 21% had a positive family history. Autosomal dominant cases were screened for WT1, TRPC6, ACTN4, and INF2 mutations. All other patients had the NPHS2 gene screened, and WT1 was tested in sporadic cases. In addition, 40 sporadic cases had the entire coding region of INF2 tested. Of the autosomal recessive and the sporadic cases, 13 and 6%, respectively, were found to have podocin-associated nephrotic syndrome, and 56% of them were compound heterozygous for the nonneutral p.R229Q polymorphism. Four percent of the sporadic and 10% of the autosomal dominant cases had a mutation in WT1. Pathogenic INF2 mutations were found in 20% of the dominant but none of the sporadic cases. In a large cohort of adolescents including both familial and sporadic disease, NPHS2 mutations explained about 7% and WT1 4% of cases, whereas INF2 proved relevant only in autosomal dominant familial disease. Thus, screening of the entire coding sequence of NPHS2 and exons 8-9 of WT1 appears to be the most rational and cost-effective screening approach in sporadic juvenile steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome.
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