Abstract

IntroductionPatients with interstitial lung disease (ILD) secondary to telomere biology disorders (TBD) experience increased morbidity after lung transplantation. Identifying patients with TBD may allow for personalized management to facilitate better outcomes. However, establishing a TBD diagnosis in adults is challenging. MethodsA TBD screening questionnaire was introduced prospectively into the lung transplant evaluation. Patients with ILD screening positive were referred for comprehensive TBD phenotyping and concurrent telomere length measurement and germline genetic testing. ResultsOf 98 patients, 32 (33%) screened positive. Eight patients (8% of total; 25% of patients with a positive screen) met strict TBD diagnostic criteria, requiring either critically short lymphocyte telomeres (<1st percentile) (n = 4), a pathogenic variant in a TBD-associated gene (n = 1), or both (n = 3) along with a TBD clinical phenotype. Additional patients not meeting strict diagnostic criteria had histories consistent with TBD along with telomere lengths <10th percentile and/or rare variants in TBD-associated genes, highlighting a critical need to refine TBD diagnostic criteria for this patient population. ConclusionA TBD phenotype screening questionnaire in patients with ILD undergoing lung transplant evaluation has a diagnostic yield of 25%. Additional gene discovery, rare variant functional testing, and refined TBD diagnostic criteria are needed to realize the maximum benefit of testing for TBD in patients undergoing lung transplantation.

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