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Detailed clinical features and genotype–phenotype correlation in an OTOF-related hearing loss cohort in Japan

Authors :
Takashi Ishino
Daisuke Kikuchi
Toshinori Kubota
Noriko Ogasawara
Misako Hyogo
Chiharu Kihara
Tomoko Esaki
Satoshi Iwasaki
Jun Nakayama
Masahiro Takahashi
Yumiko Kobayashi
Yoh ichiro Iwasa
Masako Nakai
Yuika Sakurai
Mayuri Okami
Hidehiko Takeda
Sakiko Furutate
Nana Tsuchihashi
Yukihide Maeda
Marina Kobayashi
Hiroshi Yoshihashi
Tomoko Shintani
Tadao Yoshida
Tetsuo Ikezono
Hidekane Yoishimura
Shin-ichi Usami
Han Matsuda
Yasuhiro Arai
Yuko Kataoka
Kozo Kumakawa
Taisuke Kobayashi
Risa Tona
Kyoko Nagai
Shinya Morita
Akiko Sugaya
Yohei Honkura
Remi Motegi
Shuji Izumi
Hiroshi Yamazaki
Yasushi Naito
Shin-ya Nishio
Yuzuru Ninoyu
Hideaki Sakata
Yukihiko Kanda
Shinichiro Oka
Mayumi Suematsu
Source :
Human Genetics. 141:865-875
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Mutations in the OTOF gene are a common cause of hereditary hearing loss and the main cause of auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD). Although it is reported that most of the patients with OTOF mutations have stable, congenital or prelingual onset severe-to-profound hearing loss, some patients show atypical clinical phenotypes, and the genotype–phenotype correlation in patients with OTOF mutations is not yet fully understood. In this study, we aimed to reveal detailed clinical characteristics of OTOF-related hearing loss patients and the genotype–phenotype correlation. Detailed clinical information was available for 64 patients in our database who were diagnosed with OTOF-related hearing loss. As reported previously, most of the patients (90.6%) showed a “typical” phenotype; prelingual and severe-to-profound hearing loss. Forty-seven patients (73.4%) underwent cochlear implantation surgery and showed successful outcomes; approximately 85–90% of the patients showed a hearing level of 20–39 dB with cochlear implant and a Categories of Auditory Performance (CAP) scale level 6 or better. Although truncating mutations and p.Arg1939Gln were clearly related to severe phenotype, almost half of the patients with one or more non-truncating mutations showed mild-to-moderate hearing loss. Notably, patients with p.His513Arg, p.Ile1573Thr and p.Glu1910Lys showed “true” auditory neuropathy-like clinical characteristics. In this study, we have clarified genotype–phenotype correlation and efficacy of cochlear implantation for OTOF-related hearing loss patients in the biggest cohort studied to date. We believe that the clinical characteristics and genotype–phenotype correlation found in this study will support preoperative counseling and appropriate intervention for OTOF-related hearing loss patients.

Details

ISSN :
14321203 and 03406717
Volume :
141
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a301f97d03cfb9bfd9bb56a8135cd1a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00439-021-02351-7