Abstract

Renal hypodysplasia and cystic kidney diseases, the common non-glomerular causes of pediatric chronic kidney disease (CKD), are usually diagnosed by their clinical and imaging characteristics. The high degree of phenotypic heterogeneity, in both conditions, makes the correct final diagnosis dependent on genetic testing. It is not clear, however, whether the frequencies of damaged alleles vary among different ethnicities in children with non-glomerular CKD, and this will influence the strategy used for genetic testing. In this study, 69 unrelated children (40 boys, 29 girls) of predominantly Han Chinese ethnicity with stage 2–5 non-glomerular CKD caused by suspected renal hypodysplasia or cystic kidney diseases were enrolled and assessed by molecular analysis using proband-only targeted exome sequencing and array-comparative genomic hybridization. Targeted exome sequencing discovered genetic etiologies in 33 patients (47.8%) covering 10 distinct genetic disorders. The clinical diagnoses in 13/48 patients (27.1%) with suspected renal hypodysplasia were confirmed, and two patients were reclassified carrying mutations in nephronophthisis (NPHP) genes. The clinical diagnoses in 16/20 patients (80%) with suspected cystic kidney diseases were confirmed, and one patient was reclassified as carrying a deletion in the hepatocyte nuclear factor-1-beta gene (HNF1B). The diagnosis of one patient with unknown non-glomerular disease was elucidated. No copy number variations were identified in the 20 patients with negative targeted exome sequencing results. NPHP genes were the most common disease-causing genes in the patients with disease onsets above 6 years of age (14/45, 31.1%). The children with stage 2 and 3 CKD at onset were found to carry causative mutations in paired box gene 2 (PAX2) and HNF1B gene (11/24, 45.8%), whereas those with stage 4 and 5 CKD mostly carried causative mutations in NPHP genes (19/45, 42.2%). The causative genes were not suspected by the kidney imaging patterns at disease onset. Thus, our data show that in Chinese children with non-glomerular renal dysfunction caused by renal hypodysplasia and cystic kidney diseases, the common causative genes vary with age and CKD stage at disease onset. These findings have the potential to improve management and genetic counseling of these diseases in clinical practice.

Highlights

  • The presence of structural or functional abnormalities in the kidney over a 3-month period is defined as chronic kidney disease (CKD), and is classified into five stages based on the glomerular filtration rate (Andrassy, 2013)

  • Whether a similar phenomenon exists with the pediatric chronic renal dysfunction caused by renal hypodysplasia and cystic kidney diseases, which provides the impetus for the reasonable selection of genetic testing approaches

  • Index-only targeted exome sequencing and array-comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) were performed in a cohort of 69 unrelated children with non-glomerular stage 2–5 CKD who were clinically suspected of having renal hypodysplasia or cystic kidney diseases

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The presence of structural or functional abnormalities in the kidney over a 3-month period is defined as chronic kidney disease (CKD), and is classified into five stages based on the glomerular filtration rate (Andrassy, 2013). Our previous study reported that the genetic test results for pediatric steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome vary by ethnicity (Wang et al, 2017b) It is not clear, whether a similar phenomenon exists with the pediatric chronic renal dysfunction caused by renal hypodysplasia and cystic kidney diseases, which provides the impetus for the reasonable selection of genetic testing approaches. Whether a similar phenomenon exists with the pediatric chronic renal dysfunction caused by renal hypodysplasia and cystic kidney diseases, which provides the impetus for the reasonable selection of genetic testing approaches To address this question, index-only targeted exome sequencing and array-comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) were performed in a cohort of 69 unrelated children with non-glomerular stage 2–5 CKD who were clinically suspected of having renal hypodysplasia or cystic kidney diseases

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