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Article: Developing a genetic testing panel for evaluation of morbidities in kidney transplant recipients

TitleDeveloping a genetic testing panel for evaluation of morbidities in kidney transplant recipients
Authors
Keywordsdiagnostics
exome sequencing
kidney transplantation
precision medicine
Issue Date2024
Citation
Kidney International, 2024, v. 106, n. 1, p. 115-125 How to Cite?
AbstractCardiovascular disease, infection, malignancy, and thromboembolism are major causes of morbidity and mortality in kidney transplant recipients (KTR). Prospectively identifying monogenic conditions associated with post-transplant complications may enable personalized management. Therefore, we developed a transplant morbidity panel (355 genes) associated with major post-transplant complications including cardiometabolic disorders, immunodeficiency, malignancy, and thrombophilia. This gene panel was then evaluated using exome sequencing data from 1590 KTR. Additionally, genes associated with monogenic kidney and genitourinary disorders along with American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) secondary findings v3.2 were annotated. Altogether, diagnostic variants in 37 genes associated with Mendelian kidney and genitourinary disorders were detected in 9.9% (158/1590) of KTR; 25.9% (41/158) had not been clinically diagnosed. Moreover, the transplant morbidity gene panel detected diagnostic variants for 56 monogenic disorders in 9.1% KTRs (144/1590). Cardiovascular disease, malignancy, immunodeficiency, and thrombophilia variants were detected in 5.1% (81), 2.1% (34), 1.8% (29) and 0.2% (3) among 1590 KTRs, respectively. Concordant phenotypes were present in half of these cases. Reviewing implications for transplant care, these genetic findings would have allowed physicians to set specific risk factor targets in 6.3% (9/144), arrange intensive surveillance in 97.2% (140/144), utilize preventive measures in 13.2% (19/144), guide disease-specific therapy in 63.9% (92/144), initiate specialty referral in 90.3% (130/144) and alter immunosuppression in 56.9% (82/144). Thus, beyond diagnostic testing for kidney disorders, sequence annotation identified monogenic disorders associated with common post-transplant complications in 9.1% of KTR, with important clinical implications. Incorporating genetic diagnostics for transplant morbidities would enable personalized management in pre- and post-transplant care.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/353172
ISSN
2023 Impact Factor: 14.8
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 3.886
ISI Accession Number ID

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorMa, Becky M.-
dc.contributor.authorElefant, Naama-
dc.contributor.authorTedesco, Martina-
dc.contributor.authorBogyo, Kelsie-
dc.contributor.authorVena, Natalie-
dc.contributor.authorMurthy, Sarath K.-
dc.contributor.authorBheda, Shiraz A.-
dc.contributor.authorYang, Sandy-
dc.contributor.authorTomar, Nikita-
dc.contributor.authorZhang, Jun Y.-
dc.contributor.authorHusain, Syed Ali-
dc.contributor.authorMohan, Sumit-
dc.contributor.authorKiryluk, Krzysztof-
dc.contributor.authorRasouly, Hila Milo-
dc.contributor.authorGharavi, Ali G.-
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-13T03:02:27Z-
dc.date.available2025-01-13T03:02:27Z-
dc.date.issued2024-
dc.identifier.citationKidney International, 2024, v. 106, n. 1, p. 115-125-
dc.identifier.issn0085-2538-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/353172-
dc.description.abstractCardiovascular disease, infection, malignancy, and thromboembolism are major causes of morbidity and mortality in kidney transplant recipients (KTR). Prospectively identifying monogenic conditions associated with post-transplant complications may enable personalized management. Therefore, we developed a transplant morbidity panel (355 genes) associated with major post-transplant complications including cardiometabolic disorders, immunodeficiency, malignancy, and thrombophilia. This gene panel was then evaluated using exome sequencing data from 1590 KTR. Additionally, genes associated with monogenic kidney and genitourinary disorders along with American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) secondary findings v3.2 were annotated. Altogether, diagnostic variants in 37 genes associated with Mendelian kidney and genitourinary disorders were detected in 9.9% (158/1590) of KTR; 25.9% (41/158) had not been clinically diagnosed. Moreover, the transplant morbidity gene panel detected diagnostic variants for 56 monogenic disorders in 9.1% KTRs (144/1590). Cardiovascular disease, malignancy, immunodeficiency, and thrombophilia variants were detected in 5.1% (81), 2.1% (34), 1.8% (29) and 0.2% (3) among 1590 KTRs, respectively. Concordant phenotypes were present in half of these cases. Reviewing implications for transplant care, these genetic findings would have allowed physicians to set specific risk factor targets in 6.3% (9/144), arrange intensive surveillance in 97.2% (140/144), utilize preventive measures in 13.2% (19/144), guide disease-specific therapy in 63.9% (92/144), initiate specialty referral in 90.3% (130/144) and alter immunosuppression in 56.9% (82/144). Thus, beyond diagnostic testing for kidney disorders, sequence annotation identified monogenic disorders associated with common post-transplant complications in 9.1% of KTR, with important clinical implications. Incorporating genetic diagnostics for transplant morbidities would enable personalized management in pre- and post-transplant care.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofKidney International-
dc.subjectdiagnostics-
dc.subjectexome sequencing-
dc.subjectkidney transplantation-
dc.subjectprecision medicine-
dc.titleDeveloping a genetic testing panel for evaluation of morbidities in kidney transplant recipients-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.kint.2024.02.021-
dc.identifier.pmid38521406-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85191881222-
dc.identifier.volume106-
dc.identifier.issue1-
dc.identifier.spage115-
dc.identifier.epage125-
dc.identifier.eissn1523-1755-
dc.identifier.isiWOS:001300985800001-

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