The Genetic Landscape and Epidemiology of Phenylketonuria

  • Alicia Hillert
  • Yair Anikster
  • Amaya Belanger-Quintana
  • Alberto Burlina
  • Barbara K Burton
  • Carla Carducci
  • Ana E Chiesa
  • John Christodoulou
  • Maja Đorđević
  • Lourdes R Desviat
  • Aviva Eliyahu
  • Roeland A F Evers
  • Lena Fajkusova
  • François Feillet
  • Pedro E Bonfim-Freitas
  • Maria Giżewska
  • Polina Gundorova
  • Daniela Karall
  • Katya Kneller
  • Sergey I Kutsev
  • Vincenzo Leuzzi
  • Harvey L Levy
  • Uta Lichter-Konecki
  • Ania C Muntau
  • Fares Namour
  • Mariusz Oltarzewski
  • Andrea Paras
  • Belen Perez
  • Emil Polak
  • Alexander V Polyakov
  • Francesco Porta
  • Marianne Rohrbach
  • Sabine Scholl-Bürgi
  • Norma Spécola
  • Maja Stojiljković
  • Nan Shen
  • Luiz C Santana-da Silva
  • Anastasia Skouma
  • Francjan van Spronsen
  • Vera Stoppioni
  • Beat Thöny
  • Friedrich K Trefz
  • Jerry Vockley
  • Youngguo Yu
  • Johannes Zschocke
  • Georg F Hoffmann
  • Sven F Garbade
  • Nenad Blau

Abstract

Phenylketonuria (PKU), caused by variants in the phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) gene, is the most common autosomal-recessive Mendelian phenotype of amino acid metabolism. We estimated that globally 0.45 million individuals have PKU, with global prevalence 1:23,930 live births (range 1:4,500 [Italy]-1:125,000 [Japan]). Comparing genotypes and metabolic phenotypes from 16,092 affected subjects revealed differences in disease severity in 51 countries from 17 world regions, with the global phenotype distribution of 62% classic PKU, 22% mild PKU, and 16% mild hyperphenylalaninemia. A gradient in genotype and phenotype distribution exists across Europe, from classic PKU in the east to mild PKU in the southwest and mild hyperphenylalaninemia in the south. The c.1241A>G (p.Tyr414Cys)-associated genotype can be traced from Northern to Western Europe, from Sweden via Norway, to Denmark, to the Netherlands. The frequency of classic PKU increases from Europe (56%) via Middle East (71%) to Australia (80%). Of 758 PAH variants, c.1222C>T (p.Arg408Trp) (22.2%), c.1066-11G>A (IVS10-11G>A) (6.4%), and c.782G>A (p.Arg261Gln) (5.5%) were most common and responsible for two prevalent genotypes: p.[Arg408Trp];[Arg408Trp] (11.4%) and c.[1066-11G>A];[1066-11G>A] (2.6%). Most genotypes (73%) were compound heterozygous, 27% were homozygous, and 55% of 3,659 different genotypes occurred in only a single individual. PAH variants were scored using an allelic phenotype value and correlated with pre-treatment blood phenylalanine concentrations (n = 6,115) and tetrahydrobiopterin loading test results (n = 4,381), enabling prediction of both a genotype-based phenotype (88%) and tetrahydrobiopterin responsiveness (83%). This study shows that large genotype databases enable accurate phenotype prediction, allowing appropriate targeting of therapies to optimize clinical outcome.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0002-9297
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 06.08.2020
PubMed 32668217