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Children with hypercholesterolemia of unknown cause: Value of genetic risk scores

Authors :
Sigrid W. Fouchier
Albert Wiegman
John J.P. Kastelein
G. Kees Hovingh
Barbara Sjouke
Barbara A. Hutten
Joep C. Defesche
Michael W.T. Tanck
Vascular Medicine
Amsterdam Public Health
Epidemiology and Data Science
Medical Biochemistry
Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Human Genetics
Paediatric Metabolic Diseases
Source :
Journal of clinical lipidology, 10(4), 851-859. Elsevier BV
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is caused by mutations in LDLR , APOB , or PCSK9 , and in a previous study, we identified a causative mutation in these FH genes in 95% (255 of 269) of children with the FH phenotype. It has been hypothesized that a polygenic form of hypercholesterolemia is present in FH patients in whom no mutation is identified in the 3 FH genes. Objective To address whether a polygenic form of hypercholesterolemia, defined as high-weighted effect of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) raising SNPs expressed as the genetic risk score (GRS), is present in the remaining 14 children. Methods and results On reassessment of the molecular diagnosis and clinical phenotype, 8 FH kindreds met the criteria for hypercholesterolemia of unknown cause and were included in this study. We calculated a weighted GRS comprising 10 established LDL-C–associated SNPs and the APOE genotype in these index cases and evaluated whether the index cases were characterized by an increased GRS compared to 26 first-degree relatives. Phenotypically affected and unaffected individuals could not be distinguished based on any of the risk scores. Conclusions In this and our previous study, we show that a causal mutation in LDLR , APOB , and PCSK9 can be identified in almost all children with a definite clinical diagnosis of FH. In the small group of patients without a mutation, we did not observe a higher GRS compared with unaffected relatives, which suggests that the FH phenotype is not caused by the aggregate of LDL-C increasing SNPs. Our data imply that application of the GRS is not instrumental as a diagnostic tool to individually define clinically diagnosed FH patients with polygenic hypercholesterolemia in our study population.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19332874
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical lipidology, 10(4), 851-859. Elsevier BV
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....40328df2ba6916d481298215312c10e3