The definition of sarcomeric and non-sarcomeric gene mutations in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients: A multicenter diagnostic study across Türkiye
Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessTarih
2023Yazar
Oktay, VeyselTüfekçioğlu, Omaç
Yılmaz, Dilek Çiçek
Onrat, Ersel
Karabulut, Dilay
Çelik, Murat
Balcıoğlu, Akif Serhat
Sucu, Mehmet Murat
Özdemir, Güllü
Kaya, Hakkı
Kış, Mehmet
Güven, Barış
Bağdatoğlu, Oktay
Turhan Çağlar, Fatma Nihan
Yüksel, Uygar Çağdaş
Düzen, İrfan Veysel
Barutçu, Ahmet
Şimşir, Özgüç Semih
Başarıcı, İbrahim
Parpur, Afşin
Dalgıç, Onur
Arıcan Özlük, Fatma Özlem
Evlice, Mert
Sağ, Saim
Deniz, Muhammed Furkan
Öcal, Arslan
Gazi, Emine
Şen, Taner
Özdabakoğlu, Osman
Bayar Çakıcı, Nermin
Bakır, Eren Ozan
Ülgen Kunak, Ayşegül
Çaylı, Gizem
Taşdelen, Aybike Gül
Akşit, Ercan
Uslu Çil, Şefika
Onay, Hüseyin
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Oktay, V., Tüfekçioğlu, O., Yılmaz, D. Ç., Onrat, E., Karabulut, D., Çelik, M., ... & Onay, H. (2023). The Definition of Sarcomeric and Non-Sarcomeric Gene Mutations in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Patients: A Multicenter Diagnostic Study Across Türkiye. Anatolian Journal of Cardiology.Özet
Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a common genetic heart disease and up to 40%-60% of patients have mutations in cardiac sarcomere protein genes. This genetic diagnosis study aimed to detect pathogenic or likely pathogenic sarcomeric and non-sarcomeric gene mutations and to confirm a final molecular diagnosis in patients diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Methods: A total of 392 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy were included in this nationwide multicenter study conducted at 23 centers across Türkiye. All samples were analyzed with a 17-gene hypertrophic cardiomyopathy panel using next-generation sequencing technology. The gene panel includes ACTC1, DES, FLNC, GLA, LAMP2, MYBPC3, MYH7, MYL2, MYL3, PLN, PRKAG2, PTPN11, TNNC1, TNNI3, TNNT2, TPM1, and TTR genes.
Results: The next-generation sequencing panel identified positive genetic variants (variants of unknown significance, likely pathogenic or pathogenic) in 12 genes for 121 of 392 samples, including sarcomeric gene mutations in 30.4% (119/392) of samples tested, galactosidase alpha variants in 0.5% (2/392) of samples and TTR variant in 0.025% (1/392). The likely pathogenic or pathogenic variants identified in 69 (57.0%) of 121 positive samples yielded a confirmed molecular diagnosis. The diagnostic yield was 17.1% (15.8% for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy variants) for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy phenocopies and 0.5% for Fabry disease.
Conclusions: Our study showed that the distribution of genetic mutations, the prevalence of Fabry disease, and TTR amyloidosis in the Turkish population diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy were similar to the other populations, but the percentage of sarcomeric gene mutations was slightly lower.