1. Evidence in the UK Biobank for the underdiagnosis of erythropoietic protoporphyria
- Author
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Dickey, Amy K, Quick, Corbin, Ducamp, Sarah, Zhu, Zhaozhong, Feng, Yen-Chen A, Naik, Hetanshi, Balwani, Manisha, Anderson, Karl E, Lin, Xihong, Phillips, John E, Rebeiz, Lina, Bonkovsky, Herbert L, McGuire, Brendan M, Wang, Bruce, Chasman, Daniel I, Smoller, Jordan W, Fleming, Mark D, and Christiani, David C
- Subjects
Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Digestive Diseases ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Biological Specimen Banks ,Europe ,Ferrochelatase ,Humans ,Mutation ,Protoporphyria ,Erythropoietic ,United Kingdom ,erythropoietic protoporphyria ,ferrochelatase ,prevalence ,mean corpuscular volume ,anemia ,Clinical Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
PurposeErythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP), characterized by painful cutaneous photosensitivity, results from pathogenic variants in ferrochelatase (FECH). For 96% of patients, EPP results from coinheriting a rare pathogenic variant in trans of a common hypomorphic variant c.315-48T>C (minor allele frequency 0.05). The estimated prevalence of EPP derived from the number of diagnosed individuals in Europe is 0.00092%, but this may be conservative due to underdiagnosis. No study has estimated EPP prevalence using large genetic data sets.MethodsDisease-associated FECH variants were identified in the UK Biobank, a data set of 500,953 individuals including 49,960 exome sequences. EPP prevalence was then estimated. The association of FECH variants with EPP-related traits was assessed.ResultsAnalysis of pathogenic FECH variants in the UK Biobank provides evidence that EPP prevalence is 0.0059% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.0042-0.0076%), 1.7-3.0 times more common than previously thought in the UK. In homozygotes for the common c.315-48T>C FECH variant, there was a novel decrement in both erythrocyte mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and hemoglobin.ConclusionThe prevalence of EPP has been underestimated secondary to underdiagnosis. The common c.315-48T>C allele is associated with both MCV and hemoglobin, an association that could be important both for those with and without EPP.
- Published
- 2021