Refining genotype-phenotype correlations in 304 patients with autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease and PKHD1 gene variants

  • Kathrin Burgmaier
  • Leonie Brinker
  • Florian Erger
  • Bodo Beck
  • Marcus Benz
  • Carsten Bergmann
  • Olivia Boyer
  • Laure Collard
  • Claudia Dafinger
  • Marc Fila
  • Claudia Kowalewska
  • Bärbel Lange-Sperandio
  • Laura Massella
  • Antonio Mastrangelo
  • Djalila Mekahli
  • Monika Miklaszewska
  • Nadina Ortiz-Bruechle
  • Ludwig Patzer
  • Larisa Prikhodina
  • Bruno Ranchin
  • Nadejda Ranguelov
  • Raphael Schild
  • Tomas Seeman
  • Lale Sever
  • Przemyslaw Sikora
  • Maria Szczepanska
  • Ana Teixeira
  • Julia Thumfart
  • Barbara Uetz
  • Lutz Thorsten Weber
  • Elke Wühl
  • Klaus Zerres
  • ESCAPE Study Group
  • Jörg Dötsch
  • Franz Schaefer
  • Max Christoph Liebau

Abstract

Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD) is a severe disease of early childhood that is clinically characterized by fibrocystic changes of the kidneys and the liver. The main cause of ARPKD are variants in the PKHD1 gene encoding the large transmembrane protein fibrocystin. The mechanisms underlying the observed clinical heterogeneity in ARPKD remain incompletely understood, partly due to the fact that genotype-phenotype correlations have been limited to the association of biallelic null variants in PKHD1 with the most severe phenotypes. In this observational study we analyzed a deep clinical dataset of 304 patients with ARPKD from two independent cohorts and identified novel genotype-phenotype correlations during childhood and adolescence. Biallelic null variants frequently show severe courses. Additionally, our data suggest that the affected region in PKHD1 is important in determining the phenotype. Patients with two missense variants affecting amino acids 709-1837 of fibrocystin or a missense variant in this region and a null variant less frequently developed chronic kidney failure, and patients with missense variants affecting amino acids 1838-2624 showed better hepatic outcome. Variants affecting amino acids 2625-4074 of fibrocystin were associated with poorer hepatic outcome. Thus, our data expand the understanding of genotype-phenotype correlations in pediatric ARPKD patients and can lay the foundation for more precise and personalized counselling and treatment approaches.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0085-2538
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 09.2021
PubMed 33940108