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Severe Bile Salt Export Pump Deficiency: 82 Different ABCB11 Mutations in 109 Families

Authors :
Anne Rayner
Etienne Sokal
A.S. Knisely
Peter F. Whitington
Hussa F. Al-Hussaini
Milan Jirsa
Bruno Stieger
Anthony Antoniou
Joanna Cielecka-Kuszyk
J A Byrne
Joanna Pawłowska
Henkjan J. Verkade
Ludmila Pawlikowska
Yvonne Meier
S S Strautnieks
Björn Fischler
Patricia McClean
Henrik Arnell
Benjamin L. Shneider
Richard J. Thompson
Figen Özçay
Sami Wali
Laura Dutton
Dita Cebecauerova
Radana Kotalova
Atif F. Bassas
Giorgina Mieli-Vergani
Laura N. Bull
Irena Jankowska
Antal Nemeth
Center for Liver, Digestive and Metabolic Diseases (CLDM)
Lifestyle Medicine (LM)
University of Zurich
Strautnieks, S S
Source :
Gastroenterology, 134(4), 1203-1214. W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

Background & Aims: Patients with severe bile salt export pump (BSEP) deficiency present as infants with progressive cholestatic liver disease. We characterized mutations of ABCB11 (encoding BSEP) in such patients and correlated genotypes with residual protein detection and risk of malignancy. Methods: Patients with intrahepatic cholestasis suggestive of BSEP deficiency were investigated by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and sequencing of ABCB11. Genotypes sorted by likely phenotypic severity were correlated with data on BSEP immunohistochemistry and clinical outcome. Results: Eighty-two different mutations (52 novel) were identified in 109 families (9 nonsense mutations, 10 small insertions and deletions, 15 splice-site changes, 3 whole-gene deletions, 45 missense changes). In 7 families only a single heterozygous mutation was identified despite complete sequence analysis. Thirty-two percent of mutations occurred in > 1 family, with E297G and/or D482G present in 58% of European families (52/89). On immunohistochemical. analysis (88 patients), 93% had abnormal or absent BSEP staining. Expression varied most for E297G and D482G, with some BSEP detected in 45% of patients (19/42) with these mutations. Hepatocellular carcinoma or cholangiocarcinoma developed in 15% of patients (19/128). Two protein-truncating mutations conferred particular risk; 38% (8/21) of such patients developed malignancy versus 10% (11/107) with potentially less severe genotypes (relative risk, 3.7 [confidence limits, 1.7-8.1; P = .003]). Conclusions: With this study, > 100 ABCB11 mutations are now identified. Immunohistochemically detectable BSEP is typically absent, or much reduced, in severe disease. BSEP deficiency confers risk of hepatobiliary malignancy. Close surveillance of BSEP-deficient patients retaining their native liver, particularly those carrying 2 null mutations, is essential.

Details

ISSN :
00165085
Volume :
134
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....656ea632c3ca9299920db1d35eb46297
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2008.01.038