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Liver disease in germline mutations of telomere-related genes: Prevalence, clinical, radiological, pathological features, outcome, and risk factors.

Authors :
Sidali S
Borie R
Sicre de Fontbrune F
El Husseini K
Rautou PE
Lainey E
Goria O
Crestani B
Cadranel J
Cottin V
Bunel V
Dumortier J
Jacquemin E
Reboux N
Hirschi S
Bourdin A
Meszaros M
Dharancy S
Hilaire S
Mallet V
Reynaud-Gaubert M
Terriou L
Gottrand F
Abou Chahla W
Khan JE
Carrier P
Saliba F
Rubbia-Brandt L
Aubert JD
Elkrief L
de Lédinghen V
Abergel A
Olivier T
Houssel P
Jouneau S
Wemeau L
Bergeron A
Leblanc T
Ollivier-Hourmand I
Nguyen Khac E
Morisse-Pradier H
Ba I
Boileau C
Roudot-Thoraval F
Vilgrain V
Bureau C
Nunes H
Naccache JM
Durand F
Francoz C
Roulot D
Valla D
Paradis V
Kannengiesser C
Plessier A
Source :
Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.) [Hepatology] 2024 Jun 01; Vol. 79 (6), pp. 1365-1380. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 06.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background and Aim: Germline mutations of telomere-related genes (TRG) induce multiorgan dysfunction, and liver-specific manifestations have not been clearly outlined. We aimed to describe TRG mutations-associated liver diseases.<br />Approach and Results: Retrospective multicenter analysis of liver disease (transaminases > 30 IU/L and/or abnormal liver imaging) in patients with TRG mutations. Main measurements were characteristics, outcomes, and risk factors of liver disease in a TRG mutations cohort. The prevalence of liver disease was compared to a community-based control group (n = 1190) stratified for age and matched 1:3 for known risk factors of liver disease. Among 132 patients with TRG mutations, 95 (72%) had liver disease, with associated lung, blood, skin, rheumatological, and ophthalmological TRG diseases in 82%, 77%, 55%, 39%, and 30% of cases, respectively. Liver biopsy was performed in 52/95 patients, identifying porto-sinusoidal vascular disease in 48% and advanced fibrosis/cirrhosis in 15%. After a follow-up of 21 months (12-54), ascites, hepato-pulmonary syndrome, variceal bleeding, and HCC occurred in 14%, 13%, 13%, and 2% of cases, respectively. Five-year liver transplantation-free survival was 69%. A FIB-4 score ≥ 3·25 and ≥1 risk factor for cirrhosis were associated with poor liver transplantation-free survival. Liver disease was more frequent in patients with TRG mutations than in the paired control group [80/396, (20%)], OR 12.9 (CI 95%: 7.8-21.3, p < 0.001).<br />Conclusions: TRG mutations significantly increase the risk of developing liver disease. Although symptoms may be mild, they may be associated with severe disease. Porto-sinusoidal vascular disease and cirrhosis were the most frequent lesions, suggesting that the mechanism of action is multifactorial.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1527-3350
Volume :
79
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37934624
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/HEP.0000000000000667