4.5 Article

Genetic testing enables a precision medicine approach for nephrolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis in pediatrics: a single-center cohort

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
Volume 297, Issue 4, Pages 1049-1061

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00438-022-01897-z

Keywords

Nephrolithiasis; Nephrocalcinosis; Hereditary etiology; Genetic testing; Pediatric

Funding

  1. Scientific Research Project of the Health and Family Planning Commission of Hubei Province [WJ2019M011]

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This study summarized the genotype-phenotype correlation of hereditary nephrolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis in pediatric patients and found that genetic testing and clinical phenotype evaluation enable precision medicine approach to treating patients.
Objective Hereditary factors are the main cause of pediatric nephrolithiasis (NL)/nephrocalcinosis (NC). We summarized the genotype-phenotype correlation of hereditary NL/NC in our center, to evaluate the role of genetic testing in early diagnosis. Methods The clinical data of 32 NL/NC cases, which were suspected to have an inherited basis, were retrospectively analyzed from May 2017 to August 2020. The trio-whole exome sequencing was used as the main approach for genetic testing, variants were confirmed by Sanger sequencing, and pathogenicity analysis according to protein function was predicted with custom-developed software. Results Causative monogenic mutations were detected in 24 of 32 NL/NC patients, and copy number variation was detected in one patient. A summary of manifestations in patients with inherited diseases revealed a significant degree of growth retardation, increased urinary excretion of the low-molecular weight protein, hypercalciuria, electrolyte imbalances, and young age of onset to be common in heredity disease. In addition, some patients had abnormal renal function (3 ppm 25). The most frequent pathology identified was distal renal tubular acidosis (with inclusion of SLC4A1, ATP6V1B1, and ATP6VOA4 genes), followed by Dent disease (CLCN5 and OCRL1 genes), primary hyperoxaluria (PH) (AGXT and HOGA1 genes) and Kabuki syndrome (KMT2D gene), which was more likely to present as NC or recurrent stone and having a higher correlation with a specific biochemical phenotype and extrarenal phenotype. Conclusion The etiology of NL/NC is heterogeneous. This study explored in depth the relationship between phenotype and genotype in 32 patients, and confirmed that genetic testing and clinical phenotype evaluation enable the precision medicine approach to treating patients.

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