4.7 Article

Prevalence Estimates of Polycystic Kidney and Liver Disease by Population Sequencing

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 2593-2600

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2018050493

Keywords

polycystic kidney disease; liver cysts; human genetics; genetic renal; disease; ADPKD

Funding

  1. American Society of Nephrology
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Strategy for Patient Oriented Research program grant inCKD(CAN-Solve-CKD)
  3. National Institutes of Health for the Molecular Genetics and Proteomics Core of the Mayo Translational PKD Center [DK090728]

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Background Estimating the prevalence of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is challenging because of age-dependent penetrance and incomplete clinical ascertainment. Early studies estimated the lifetime risk of ADPKD to be about one per 1000 in the general population, whereas recent epidemiologic studies report a point prevalence of three to five cases per 10,000 in the general population. Methods To measure the frequency of high-confidence mutations presumed to be causative in ADPKD and autosomal dominant polycystic liver disease (ADPLD) and estimate lifetime ADPKD prevalence, we used two large, population sequencing databases, gnomAD (15,496 whole-genome sequences; 123,136 exome sequences) and BRAVO (62,784 whole-genome sequences). We used stringent criteria for defining rare variants in genes involved in ADPKD (PKD1, PKD2), ADPLD (PRKCSH, SEC63, GANAB, ALG8, SEC61B, LRP5), and potential cystic disease modifiers; evaluated variants for quality and annotation; compared variants with data from an ADPKD mutation database; and used bioinformatic tools to predict pathogenicity. Results Identification of high-confidence pathogenic mutations in whole-genome sequencing provided a lower boundary for lifetime ADPKD prevalence of 9.3 cases per 10,000 sequenced. Estimates from whole-genome and exome data were similar. Truncating mutations in ADPLD genes and genes of potential relevance as cyst modifiers were found in 20.2 cases and 103.9 cases per 10,000 sequenced, respectively. Conclusions Population whole-genome sequencing suggests a higher than expected prevalence of ADPKD-associated mutations. Loss-of-function mutations in ADPLD genes are also more common than expected, suggesting the possibility of unrecognized cases and incomplete penetrance. Substantial rare variation exists in genes with potential for phenotype modification in ADPKD.

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