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Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant

Patient: Female, 19-year-old Final Diagnosis: Nephronophthisis Symptoms: Fatigue • poor appetite Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Genetics • Nephrology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Nephronophthisis, an autosomal recessive ciliopathy involving mutations in primary cilium genes, is characterize...

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Autores principales: Ajiboye, Oyintayo, Vengoechea, Jaime E., Gupta, Ritu, Lomashvili, Koba
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10681955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37992003
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.941413
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author Ajiboye, Oyintayo
Vengoechea, Jaime E.
Gupta, Ritu
Lomashvili, Koba
author_facet Ajiboye, Oyintayo
Vengoechea, Jaime E.
Gupta, Ritu
Lomashvili, Koba
author_sort Ajiboye, Oyintayo
collection PubMed
description Patient: Female, 19-year-old Final Diagnosis: Nephronophthisis Symptoms: Fatigue • poor appetite Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Genetics • Nephrology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Nephronophthisis, an autosomal recessive ciliopathy involving mutations in primary cilium genes, is characterized by chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis and a defective urine concentrating capacity. It accounts for about 5% of renal failure in children and adolescents and usually progresses to end-stage renal disease before the age of 30 years. Nephronophthisis is associated with extrarenal manifestations, including retinitis pigmentosa in Senior-Loken syndrome (SLS), and liver fibrosis in 10–20% of cases. While some presenting patterns could be characteristic, patients may have atypical presentation, making diagnosis difficult. Tubulointerstitial fibrosis is the predominant feature on histology and as such, diagnosis depends mostly on genetic testing. Despite advances in renal genomics over the years with a better understanding of primary cilia and ciliary theory, about 40% of nephronophthisis cases go undiagnosed. As the underlying genetic etiologies are not fully understood, morphologic pathologic findings are non-specific, and treatment options are limited to dialysis and transplantation. CASE REPORT: We describe a unique case of a patient with adolescent nephronophthisis who presented with advanced chronic kidney disease and severe pancytopenia, who progressed to end-stage renal disease at the age of 19, and was found to have syndromic nephronophthisis with compound heterozygous inheritance. CONCLUSIONS: This report highlights the atypical presentation patterns that can be seen in syndromic nephronophthisis, the importance of genetic diagnosis when there is a high index of suspicion, and the need to further study genetic variants to better understand and diagnose the disease and to develop targeted therapy.
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spelling pubmed-106819552023-11-30 Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant Ajiboye, Oyintayo Vengoechea, Jaime E. Gupta, Ritu Lomashvili, Koba Am J Case Rep Articles Patient: Female, 19-year-old Final Diagnosis: Nephronophthisis Symptoms: Fatigue • poor appetite Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Genetics • Nephrology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Nephronophthisis, an autosomal recessive ciliopathy involving mutations in primary cilium genes, is characterized by chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis and a defective urine concentrating capacity. It accounts for about 5% of renal failure in children and adolescents and usually progresses to end-stage renal disease before the age of 30 years. Nephronophthisis is associated with extrarenal manifestations, including retinitis pigmentosa in Senior-Loken syndrome (SLS), and liver fibrosis in 10–20% of cases. While some presenting patterns could be characteristic, patients may have atypical presentation, making diagnosis difficult. Tubulointerstitial fibrosis is the predominant feature on histology and as such, diagnosis depends mostly on genetic testing. Despite advances in renal genomics over the years with a better understanding of primary cilia and ciliary theory, about 40% of nephronophthisis cases go undiagnosed. As the underlying genetic etiologies are not fully understood, morphologic pathologic findings are non-specific, and treatment options are limited to dialysis and transplantation. CASE REPORT: We describe a unique case of a patient with adolescent nephronophthisis who presented with advanced chronic kidney disease and severe pancytopenia, who progressed to end-stage renal disease at the age of 19, and was found to have syndromic nephronophthisis with compound heterozygous inheritance. CONCLUSIONS: This report highlights the atypical presentation patterns that can be seen in syndromic nephronophthisis, the importance of genetic diagnosis when there is a high index of suspicion, and the need to further study genetic variants to better understand and diagnose the disease and to develop targeted therapy. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2023-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10681955/ /pubmed/37992003 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.941413 Text en © Am J Case Rep, 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Articles
Ajiboye, Oyintayo
Vengoechea, Jaime E.
Gupta, Ritu
Lomashvili, Koba
Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant
title Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant
title_full Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant
title_fullStr Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant
title_full_unstemmed Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant
title_short Autosomal Recessive Adolescent Syndromic Nephronophthisis Caused by a Novel Compound Heterozygous Pathogenic Variant
title_sort autosomal recessive adolescent syndromic nephronophthisis caused by a novel compound heterozygous pathogenic variant
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10681955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37992003
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.941413
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