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Genetic Background and Clinicopathologic Features of Adult-onset Nephronophthisis

Authors :
Hideo Tsushima
Saki Watanabe
Ai Katsuma
Yuko Ohnuki
Tatemitsu Rai
Katsushi Nagatsuji
Shintaro Mandai
Tatsuo Tsukamoto
Takahiro Tsuji
Shotaro Naito
Yutaro Mori
Takuya Fujimaru
Kiyotaka Nagahama
Kenichi Tanaka
Mariko Miyazaki
Motoko Yanagita
Hiroaki Kikuchi
Shinya Kawamoto
Masayuki Mizui
Naoto Hamano
Junichi Hoshino
Yuki Ooki
Takayasu Mori
Soichiro Iimori
Fumiaki Ando
Mamiko Shimamoto
Shinichi Uchida
Eikan Mishima
Yoshifumi Ubara
Michio Nagata
Eisei Sohara
Tamaki Kuyama
Kenji Maki
Akinari Sekine
Koichiro Susa
Noriaki Sato
Toshio Mochizuki
Kouhei Yamamoto
Mariko Oishi
Motoko Chiga
Kunio Kawanishi
Source :
Kidney International Reports
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction Recently, nephronophthisis (NPH) has been considered a monogenic cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in adults. However, adult-onset NPH is difficult to accurately diagnose and has not been reported in a cohort study. In this study, we assessed the genetic background and clinicopathologic features of adult NPH. Methods We investigated 18 sporadic adult patients who were suspected as having NPH by renal biopsy. We analyzed 69 genes that cause hereditary cystic kidney disease and compared clinicopathologic findings between patients with and without pathogenic mutations in NPH-causing genes. Results Seven of 18 patients had pathogenic NPH-causing mutations in NPHP1, NPHP3, NPHP4, or CEP164. Compared with patients without pathogenic mutations, those with pathogenic mutations were significantly younger but did not significantly differ in the classic NPH pathologic findings, such as tubular cysts. On the other hand, the number of tubules with thick tubular basement membrane (TBM) duplication, which was defined as >10-μm thickness, was significantly higher in patients with genetically proven adult NPH than in those without pathogenic mutations. α-Smooth muscle actin (α-SMA)-positive myofibroblasts were detected inside thick TBM duplication. Conclusions In adult patients with NPH, thick TBM duplication was the specific finding. Our analysis also suggested that older patients tended to have no pathogenic mutations, even when they were suspected to have NPH by renal biopsy. These findings could be the novel clinical clue for the diagnosis of NPH in adult patients.<br />Graphical abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24680249
Volume :
6
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney International Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ae5d5f542308046193b480363d2dee7