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Prenatal diagnosis of HNF1B ‐associated renal cysts: Is there a need to differentiate intragenic variants from 17q12 microdeletion syndrome?

Authors :
Jan Frederik Schaefer
Mandy Krumbiegel
Bernt Popp
Markus Zweier
Arif B. Ekici
Christiane Zweier
Cornelia Kraus
Steffen Uebe
Maren Zapke
Juliane Hoyer
Christian Thiel
André Reis
Florian Faschingbauer
Anita Rauch
Michael Schneider
Michael Wiesener
Georgia Vasileiou
University of Zurich
Vasileiou, Georgia
Source :
Prenatal Diagnosis. 39:1136-1147
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE 17q12 microdeletions containing HNF1B and intragenic variants within this gene are associated with variable developmental, endocrine, and renal anomalies, often already noted prenatally as hyperechogenic/cystic kidneys. Here, we describe prenatal and postnatal phenotypes of seven individuals with HNF1B aberrations and compare their clinical and genetic data to those of previous studies. METHODS Prenatal sequencing and postnatal chromosomal microarray analysis were performed in seven individuals with renal and/or neurodevelopmental phenotypes. We evaluated HNF1B-related clinical features from 82 studies and reclassified 192 reported intragenic HNF1B variants. RESULTS In a prenatal case, we identified a novel in-frame deletion p.(Gly239del) within the HNF1B DNA-binding domain, a mutational hot spot as demonstrated by spatial clustering analysis and high computational prediction scores. The six postnatally diagnosed individuals harbored 17q12 microdeletions. Literature screening revealed variable reporting of HNF1B-associated clinical traits. Overall, both mutation groups showed a high phenotypic heterogeneity. The reclassification of all previously reported intragenic HNF1B variants provided an up-to-date overview of the mutational spectrum. CONCLUSIONS We highlight the value of prenatal HNF1B screening in renal developmental diseases. Standardized clinical reporting and systematic classification of HNF1B variants are necessary for a more accurate risk quantification of prenatal and postnatal clinical features, improving genetic counseling and prenatal decision making.

Details

ISSN :
10970223 and 01973851
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Prenatal Diagnosis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a92a56bb8a8e201c7661b109c86d6b99
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pd.5556