4.7 Article

Clinical and Genetic Characteristics of Finnish Patients with Autosomal Recessive and Dominant Non-Syndromic Hearing Loss Due to Pathogenic TMC1 Variants

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11071837

Keywords

TMC1; hearing loss; cochlear implant; hearing rehabilitation; congenital

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [338446]
  2. Uolevi Maki Foundation
  3. Competitive State Research Financing of the Expert Responsibility Area of Oulu University Hospital [VTR K36733]

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Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a common sensory deficit worldwide, and genetic factors contribute significantly to congenital hearing loss. This study identified TMC1 gene variants associated with different types of hearing loss. Early diagnosis and timely hearing rehabilitation can lead to good speech perception in noise for affected individuals.
Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is one of the most common sensory deficits worldwide, and genetic factors contribute to at least 50-60% of the congenital hearing loss cases. The transmembrane channel-like protein 1 (TMC1) gene has been linked to autosomal recessive (DFNB7/11) and autosomal dominant (DFNA36) non-syndromic hearing loss, and it is a relatively common genetic cause of SNHL. Here, we report eight Finnish families with 11 affected family members with either recessively inherited homozygous or compound heterozygous TMC1 variants associated with congenital moderate-to-profound hearing loss, or a dominantly inherited heterozygous TMC1 variant associated with postlingual progressive hearing loss. We show that the TMC1 c.1534C>T, p.(Arg512*) variant is likely a founder variant that is enriched in the Finnish population. We describe a novel recessive disease-causing TMC1 c.968A>G, p.(Tyr323Cys) variant. We also show that individuals in this cohort who were diagnosed early and received timely hearing rehabilitation with hearing aids and cochlear implants (CI) have reached good speech perception in noise. Comparison of the genetic data with the outcome of CI rehabilitation increases our understanding of the extent to which underlying pathogenic gene variants explain the differences in CI rehabilitation outcomes.

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