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Filaggrin haploinsufficiency is highly penetrant and is associated with increased severity of eczema: further delineation of the skin phenotype in a prospective epidemiological study of 792 school children

Authors :
Caroline L Relton
Heather J. Cordell
Nick J. Reynolds
Sara J. Brown
Haihui Liao
Aileen Sandilands
Yiwei Zhao
Whi McLean
Source :
The British Journal of Dermatology
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Summary Background Null mutations within the filaggrin gene (FLG) cause ichthyosis vulgaris and are associated with atopic eczema. However, the dermatological features of filaggrin haploinsufficiency have not been clearly defined. Objectives This study investigated the genotype–phenotype association between detailed skin phenotype and FLG genotype data in a population-based cohort of children. Methods Children (n = 792) aged 7–9 years were examined by a dermatologist. Features of ichthyosis vulgaris, atopic eczema and xerosis were recorded and eczema severity graded using the Three Item Severity score. Each child was genotyped for the six most prevalent FLG null mutations (R501X, 2282del4, R2447X, S3247X, 3702delG, 3673delC). Fisher’s exact test was used to compare genotype frequencies in phenotype groups; logistic regression analysis was used to estimate odds ratios and penetrance of the FLG null genotype and a permutation test performed to investigate eczema severity in different genotype groups. Results Ten children in this cohort had ichthyosis vulgaris, of whom five had mild–moderate eczema. The penetrance of FLG null mutations with respect to flexural eczema was 55·6% in individuals with two mutations, 16·3% in individuals with one mutation and 14·2% in wild-type individuals. Summating skin features known to be associated with FLG null mutations (ichthyosis, keratosis pilaris, palmar hyperlinearity and flexural eczema) showed a penetrance of 100% in children with two FLG mutations, 87·8% in children with one FLG mutation and 46·5% in wild-type individuals (P

Details

ISSN :
13652133
Volume :
161
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The British journal of dermatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7c94f8ff458f04f9c202f48b888c02a2