1. Haemochromatosis mutations in North-East Scotland.
- Author
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Miedzybrodzka Z, Loughlin S, Baty D, Terron A, Kelly K, Dean J, Greaves M, Pippard M, and Haites N
- Subjects
- Female, Gene Frequency, Hemochromatosis epidemiology, Heterozygote, Homozygote, Humans, Scotland epidemiology, Hemochromatosis genetics, Mutation genetics
- Abstract
The HFE gene and its mutations C282Y and H63D cause hereditary haemochromatosis (HH). Among 54 affected individuals from North-East Scotland, 91% were homozygous for C282Y and 5.5% were compound heterozygotes for C282Y and H63D. The general population allele frequencies were high (8% and 15.7% for C282Y and H63D respectively). Although it is likely that HH is under diagnosed, these figures suggest that disease expression is variable, and many of those with the genetic predisposition HH will never develop the clinical consequences of iron overload. This has implications for diagnosis and predictive testing.
- Published
- 1999
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