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Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia

X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH), a dominant disorder caused by a disease-associated variant in the PHEX gene, affects males and females of all ages. Rickets and osteomalacia may be present along with short stature, lower limb deformity, muscle pain and/or weakness/fatigue, bone pain, joint pain/stif...

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Autores principales: Dahir, Kathryn, Rush, Eric, Beltran, Daniel, Eisenbeis, Scott, Johnson, Britt, Ramesan, Prameela, Sarafrazi, Soodabeh, Truty, Rebecca, Miller, Nicole
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8265956/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.533
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author Dahir, Kathryn
Rush, Eric
Beltran, Daniel
Eisenbeis, Scott
Johnson, Britt
Ramesan, Prameela
Sarafrazi, Soodabeh
Truty, Rebecca
Miller, Nicole
author_facet Dahir, Kathryn
Rush, Eric
Beltran, Daniel
Eisenbeis, Scott
Johnson, Britt
Ramesan, Prameela
Sarafrazi, Soodabeh
Truty, Rebecca
Miller, Nicole
author_sort Dahir, Kathryn
collection PubMed
description X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH), a dominant disorder caused by a disease-associated variant in the PHEX gene, affects males and females of all ages. Rickets and osteomalacia may be present along with short stature, lower limb deformity, muscle pain and/or weakness/fatigue, bone pain, joint pain/stiffness, hearing difficulty, enthesopathy, osteoarthritis, and dental abscesses. Patients with XLH have below-normal serum phosphate and elevated serum FGF23. XLH is one of multiple etiologies of hypophosphatemia; depending on genetic cause, management may differ. Acquired hypophosphatemia (e.g. tumor induced osteomalacia) is non-hereditary in nature. This program provides a no-charge genetic test to confirm a clinical XLH diagnosis or to aid suspected genetic hypophosphatemia diagnosis. Patients aged >/= 6 months with either a clinical XLH diagnosis or suspicion of genetic hypophosphatemia, as evidenced by 2 or more clinical signs/ symptoms, were eligible for testing. The next generation sequencing panel includes 13 genes: ALPL, CLCN5, CYP2R1, CYP27B1, DMP1, ENPP1, FAH, FAM20C, FGF23, FGFR1, PHEX, SLC34A3 and VDR. Copy number variant detection was performed. 831 unrelated individuals were tested as of June 30, 2020. 569 (68.5%) of these subjects had a PHEX variant: 519 (91.2%) were either pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) and 50 (8.8%) were variants of uncertain significance (VUS). Of the 312 (37.5%) cases where no PHEX molecular diagnosis was found, 38 (12.2%) had molecular diagnoses associated with other genes/disorders: 4 had a variant (P/LP) in FGF23 (autosomal dominant [AD] hypophosphatemic rickets), 2 had two variants (P/LP) in CYP27B1 (autosomal recessive [AR] vitamin D dependent rickets), 1 had P/LP variants in ENPP1 (AR hypophosphatemic rickets Type 2). There were 27 cases with single P or LP variants in ALPL (AD hypophosphatasia, HPP); 4 cases carried two variants (P/LP) in ALPL (AR form). Of 237 unique P/LP PHEX variants detected: 59 were deletions, duplications or insertions; 37 were copy number variants; 52 were splice-site variants; 89 were single nucleotide variants. Additional family member testing/clinical information resulted in 48 cases having VUS reclassified to P/LP, highlighting the value of cascade family testing/clinical info to resolve VUS. RNA analyses to resolve VUS may further improve molecular diagnostic yield. Program results demonstrate a high diagnostic yield for XLH/ genetic hypophosphatemia and new insight into XLH-associated PHEX variants.
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spelling pubmed-82659562021-07-09 Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia Dahir, Kathryn Rush, Eric Beltran, Daniel Eisenbeis, Scott Johnson, Britt Ramesan, Prameela Sarafrazi, Soodabeh Truty, Rebecca Miller, Nicole J Endocr Soc Bone and Mineral Metabolism X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH), a dominant disorder caused by a disease-associated variant in the PHEX gene, affects males and females of all ages. Rickets and osteomalacia may be present along with short stature, lower limb deformity, muscle pain and/or weakness/fatigue, bone pain, joint pain/stiffness, hearing difficulty, enthesopathy, osteoarthritis, and dental abscesses. Patients with XLH have below-normal serum phosphate and elevated serum FGF23. XLH is one of multiple etiologies of hypophosphatemia; depending on genetic cause, management may differ. Acquired hypophosphatemia (e.g. tumor induced osteomalacia) is non-hereditary in nature. This program provides a no-charge genetic test to confirm a clinical XLH diagnosis or to aid suspected genetic hypophosphatemia diagnosis. Patients aged >/= 6 months with either a clinical XLH diagnosis or suspicion of genetic hypophosphatemia, as evidenced by 2 or more clinical signs/ symptoms, were eligible for testing. The next generation sequencing panel includes 13 genes: ALPL, CLCN5, CYP2R1, CYP27B1, DMP1, ENPP1, FAH, FAM20C, FGF23, FGFR1, PHEX, SLC34A3 and VDR. Copy number variant detection was performed. 831 unrelated individuals were tested as of June 30, 2020. 569 (68.5%) of these subjects had a PHEX variant: 519 (91.2%) were either pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) and 50 (8.8%) were variants of uncertain significance (VUS). Of the 312 (37.5%) cases where no PHEX molecular diagnosis was found, 38 (12.2%) had molecular diagnoses associated with other genes/disorders: 4 had a variant (P/LP) in FGF23 (autosomal dominant [AD] hypophosphatemic rickets), 2 had two variants (P/LP) in CYP27B1 (autosomal recessive [AR] vitamin D dependent rickets), 1 had P/LP variants in ENPP1 (AR hypophosphatemic rickets Type 2). There were 27 cases with single P or LP variants in ALPL (AD hypophosphatasia, HPP); 4 cases carried two variants (P/LP) in ALPL (AR form). Of 237 unique P/LP PHEX variants detected: 59 were deletions, duplications or insertions; 37 were copy number variants; 52 were splice-site variants; 89 were single nucleotide variants. Additional family member testing/clinical information resulted in 48 cases having VUS reclassified to P/LP, highlighting the value of cascade family testing/clinical info to resolve VUS. RNA analyses to resolve VUS may further improve molecular diagnostic yield. Program results demonstrate a high diagnostic yield for XLH/ genetic hypophosphatemia and new insight into XLH-associated PHEX variants. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8265956/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.533 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Bone and Mineral Metabolism
Dahir, Kathryn
Rush, Eric
Beltran, Daniel
Eisenbeis, Scott
Johnson, Britt
Ramesan, Prameela
Sarafrazi, Soodabeh
Truty, Rebecca
Miller, Nicole
Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia
title Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia
title_full Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia
title_fullStr Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia
title_full_unstemmed Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia
title_short Hypophosphatemia Gene Panel Sponsored Program: A High Yield of Molecular Diagnoses from Clinically Confirmed XLH and Suspected Genetic Hypophosphatemia
title_sort hypophosphatemia gene panel sponsored program: a high yield of molecular diagnoses from clinically confirmed xlh and suspected genetic hypophosphatemia
topic Bone and Mineral Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8265956/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.533
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