4.1 Article

Genetic analyses in a cohort of Portuguese pediatric patients with congenital hypothyroidism

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages 1265-1273

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/jpem-2019-0047

Keywords

congenital goiter; congenital hypothyroidism; thyroid carcinoma; thyroid dyshormonogenesis; TPO gene

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Background: Permanent primary congenital hypothyroidism (CH) can be caused by thyroid dysgenesis or dyshormonogenesis. A molecular genetic study is recommended in dyshormonogenesis, in syndromic hypothyroidism and when there is a family history of CH. The aim of this study was to identify a monogenic etiology for CH in selected individuals from a cohort of primary permanent CH. Methods: From an initial cohort of 79 patients with permanent CH (3-19 years), 11 patients were selected for molecular analyses. Nine patients with dyshormonogenesis (normal in-situ gland or goiter) were screened for causative variants, by next-generation sequencing (NGS), in 28 genes known to be responsible for CH. One patient with a family history of CH was screened for the paired-box gene 8 (PAX8) gene and another patient with a syndromic CH was screened for the NKX2-1 gene. Results: We found a monogenic basis of disease in eight patients, involving the thyroid peroxidase (TPO) gene (four patients), the thyroglobulin (TG) gene (two patients), and the PAX8 and NKX2-1 genes (one patient each). Two patients were heterozygotes, one harboring a variant in the TG gene and the other in the SLC5A5 gene. In one patient, we found no potential causative variants in any of the 28 genes screened. We described five novel variants: three in the TG gene, one in the NKX2-1 and one in the SLCSA5 gene, all of them classified as pathogenic. Conclusions: In eight of the 11 screened patients, a monogenic disease was found. These results highlight the advantage of using an NGS panel and provide further data regarding the molecular basis of CH.

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