1. Severe parental phenotype associates with hypertension in children with ADPKD.
- Author
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Demoulin, Nathalie, Van Regemorter, Elliott, Dahan, Karin, Hougardy, Charlotte, Morelle, Johann, Gillion, Valentine, Ranguelov, Nadejda, and Godefroid, Nathalie
- Subjects
HYPERTENSION genetics ,HYPERTENSION risk factors ,POLYCYSTIC kidney disease ,GLOMERULAR filtration rate ,PROTEINS ,SEQUENCE analysis ,MOLECULAR diagnosis ,PRENATAL diagnosis ,URINARY tract infections ,KIDNEY failure ,GENETIC testing ,ACQUISITION of data ,FISHER exact test ,RISK assessment ,BIOINFORMATICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,SEVERITY of illness index ,GENOTYPES ,SYMPTOMS ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL records ,DISEASE prevalence ,GENETIC markers ,AMBULATORY blood pressure monitoring ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,GENETIC techniques ,ABDOMINAL pain ,HEMATURIA ,PARENTS ,PHENOTYPES ,GENEALOGY ,EARLY diagnosis ,CREATININE ,DISEASE risk factors ,DISEASE complications ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Early detection of hypertension in children with autosomal polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) may be beneficial, but screening children at risk of ADPKD remains controversial. We investigated determinants of hypertension in children with ADPKD to help identify a subgroup of children at risk of ADPKD for whom screening for the disease and/or its complications would be more relevant. Methods: In a retrospective study including consecutive children with ADPKD aged 5–18 years and followed at Saint-Luc Hospital Brussels between 2006 and 2020, we investigated the potential association between genotype, clinical characteristics and parental phenotype, and presence of hypertension. Hypertension was defined as blood pressure > P95 during 24-h ambulatory monitoring or anti-hypertensive therapy use. Parental phenotype was considered severe based on age at kidney failure, Mayo Clinic Imaging Classification and rate of eGFR decline. Results: The study enrolled 55 children with ADPKD (mean age 9.9 ± 2.2 years, 45% male), including 44 with a PKD1 mutation and 5 with no mutation identified. Nine (16%) children had hypertension. Hypertension in children was associated with parental phenotype severity (8/27 (30%) children with severe parental phenotype vs. 1/23 (4%) children with non-severe parental phenotype (p = 0.03)) and height-adjusted bilateral nephromegaly (6/9 (67%) children with bilateral nephromegaly vs. 3/44 (7%) children without bilateral nephromegaly (p < 0.001)). Conclusions: Severe parental phenotype is associated with higher prevalence of hypertension in children with ADPKD. Hence, children of parents with severe ADPKD phenotype may be those who will most benefit from screening of the disease and/or yearly BP measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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