1. Gene Mutations Linked to Hereditary Angioedema in Solitary Angioedema Patients With Normal C1 Inhibitor.
- Author
-
Bork K, Wulff K, Witzke G, Staubach P, Hardt J, and Meinke P
- Subjects
- Humans, Complement C1 Inhibitor Protein genetics, Complement C1 Inhibitor Protein analysis, Factor XII genetics, Histamine Antagonists, Mutation, Plasminogen genetics, Angioedema diagnosis, Angioedemas, Hereditary drug therapy, Angioedemas, Hereditary genetics, Angioedemas, Hereditary complications
- Abstract
Background: Chronic recurrent angioedema without wheals (CRA) with normal C1 inhibitor (C1-INH) that is unresponsive to antihistamines may involve patients with recurrent angioedema of unknown cause (ie, so-called non-histaminergic idiopathic angioedema) as well as patients with hereditary angioedema with normal C1-INH (HAEnCI) when HAEnCI occurs in only one family member., Objective: To identify patients with one of type of HAEnCI in a group of patients with CRA with normal C1-INH that was unresponsive to antihistamines., Methods: A total of 132 patients with CRA and normal C1-INH that was unresponsive to antihistamines underwent mutational and clinical analysis. The presence of hereditary angioedema-specific mutations in Factor XII, plasminogen, ANGPT1, KNG1, MYOF, and HS3ST6 genes was tested by Sanger sequencing. When an HAEnCI-causing mutation was identified, available asymptomatic relatives were genetically tested., Results: In 116 of 132 solitary patients with CRA (87.9%), none of the six HAEnCI-linked mutations could be found. Ten patients (7.6%) had the Factor XII mutation c.983C>A (p.T328K) and six (4.5%) the plasminogen mutation c.988A>G (p.K330E). Other mutations linked to HAEnCI were not found in this patient series. In the 16 families with HAEnCI, 11 asymptomatic carriers of one of the HAEnCI-linked mutations were identified., Conclusions: A search for HAEnCI-linked mutations in patients with solitary CRA may lead to the detection of patients and families with HAEnCI. This is important because family members can be identified who are at risk for developing potentially life-threatening angioedema, although they were previously asymptomatic. Without genetic investigation, the risk for an HAEnCI would have remained undetected in these patients and asymptomatic relatives., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF