4.5 Article

The genetic landscape of polycystic kidney disease in Ireland

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 827-838

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41431-020-00806-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Enterprise Partnership Scheme Fellowship Award (2019) from The Irish Research Council
  2. Punchestown Kidney Research Fund [EPSPD/2019/213]
  3. Beaumont Hospital Foundation
  4. Royal Irish Academy
  5. Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
  6. Irish Clinical Academic Training (ICAT) Programme - Wellcome Trust
  7. Health Research Board [203930/B/16/Z]
  8. Health Service Executive National Doctors Training and Planning
  9. Health and Social Care, Research and Development Division, Northern Ireland

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PKDs are the most common Mendelian forms of renal disease characterized by fluid-filled renal cysts, leading to progressive kidney function loss. Ireland is a valuable area for genetic studies of PKD, with diagnostic rates of 71-83% in Irish patients using different variant classification guidelines. The study reveals a spectrum of Irish autosomal dominant PKD pathogenic variants and highlights issues with implementing ACMG guidelines for variant pathogenicity interpretation in clinical genetics.
Polycystic kidney diseases (PKDs) comprise the most common Mendelian forms of renal disease. It is characterised by the development of fluid-filled renal cysts, causing progressive loss of kidney function, culminating in the need for renal replacement therapy or kidney transplant. Ireland represents a valuable region for the genetic study of PKD, as family sizes are traditionally large and the population relatively homogenous. Studying a cohort of 169 patients, we describe the genetic landscape of PKD in Ireland for the first time, compare the clinical features of patients with and without a molecular diagnosis and correlate disease severity with autosomal dominant pathogenic variant type. Using a combination of molecular genetic tools, including targeted next-generation sequencing, we report diagnostic rates of 71-83% in Irish PKD patients, depending on which variant classification guidelines are used (ACMG or Mayo clinic respectively). We have catalogued a spectrum of Irish autosomal dominant PKD pathogenic variants including 36 novel variants. We illustrate how apparently unrelated individuals carrying the same autosomal dominant pathogenic variant are highly likely to have inherited that variant from a common ancestor. We highlight issues surrounding the implementation of the ACMG guidelines for variant pathogenicity interpretation in PKD, which have important implications for clinical genetics.

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