4.6 Article

Next-generation sequencing to confirm clinical familial hypercholesterolemia

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY
卷 28, 期 8, 页码 875-883

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurjpc/zwaa451

关键词

Familial hypercholesterolemia; LDLR; APOB; PCSK9; next-generation sequencing; DLCN; MedPed; cholesterol; lipid metabolism; mutation

资金

  1. ZonMW grant [016.156.445]

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In the Netherlands, 14.9% of suspected familial hypercholesterolemia patients were found to have a pathogenic variant in LDLR, APOB or PCSK9, and this rate has decreased over the past two decades. The use of stringent clinical criteria algorithms is recommended to increase the yield of genetic testing. Variants in minor familial hypercholesterolemia genes may explain the phenotype in a small percentage of patients.
Background Familial hypercholesterolemia is characterised by high low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels and is caused by a pathogenic variant in LDLR, APOB or PCSK9. We investigated which proportion of suspected familial hypercholesterolemia patients was genetically confirmed, and whether this has changed over the past 20 years in The Netherlands. Methods Targeted next-generation sequencing of 27 genes involved in lipid metabolism was performed in patients with low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels greater than 5 mmol/L who were referred to our centre between May 2016 and July 2018. The proportion of patients carrying likely pathogenic or pathogenic variants in LDLR, APOB or PCSK9, or the minor familial hypercholesterolemia genes LDLRAP1, ABCG5, ABCG8, LIPA and APOE were investigated. This was compared with the yield of Sanger sequencing between 1999 and 2016. Results A total of 227 out of the 1528 referred patients (14.9%) were heterozygous carriers of a pathogenic variant in LDLR (80.2%), APOB (14.5%) or PCSK9 (5.3%). More than 50% of patients with a Dutch Lipid Clinic Network score of 'probable' or 'definite' familial hypercholesterolemia were familial hypercholesterolemia mutation-positive; 4.8% of the familial hypercholesterolemia mutation-negative patients carried a variant in one of the minor familial hypercholesterolemia genes. The mutation detection rate has decreased over the past two decades, especially in younger patients in which it dropped from 45% in 1999 to 30% in 2018. Conclusions A rare pathogenic variant in LDLR, APOB or PCSK9 was identified in 14.9% of suspected familial hypercholesterolemia patients and this rate has decreased in the past two decades. Stringent use of clinical criteria algorithms is warranted to increase this yield. Variants in the minor familial hypercholesterolemia genes provide a possible explanation for the familial hypercholesterolemia phenotype in a minority of patients.

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