Kidney International Reports (Jun 2021)

Risk of Atypical HUS Among Family Members of Patients Carrying Complement Regulatory Gene Abnormality

  • Gianluigi Ardissino,
  • Selena Longhi,
  • Luigi Porcaro,
  • Giulia Pintarelli,
  • Bice Strumbo,
  • Valentina Capone,
  • Donata Cresseri,
  • Giulia Loffredo,
  • Francesca Tel,
  • Stefania Salardi,
  • Martina Sgarbanti,
  • Laura Martelli,
  • Evangeline Millicent Rodrigues,
  • Nicolò Borsa-Ghiringhelli,
  • Giovanni Montini,
  • Manuela Seia,
  • Massimo Cugno,
  • Fabio Carfagna,
  • Dario Consonni,
  • Silvana Tedeschi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
pp. 1614 – 1621

Abstract

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Introduction: Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) is mainly due to complement regulatory gene abnormalities with a dominant pattern but incomplete penetrance. Thus, healthy carriers can be identified in any family of aHUS patients, but it is unpredictable if they will eventually develop aHUS. Methods: Patients are screened for 10 complement regulatory gene abnormalities and once a genetic alteration is identified, the search is extended to at-risk family members. The present cohort study includes 257 subjects from 71 families: 99 aHUS patients (71 index cases + 28 affected family members) and 158 healthy relatives with a documented complement gene abnormality. Results: Fourteen families (19.7%) experienced multiple cases. Over a cumulative observation period of 7595 person-years, only 28 family members carrying gene mutations experienced aHUS (overall penetrance of 20%), leading to a disease rate of 3.69 events for 1000 person-years. The disease rate was 7.47 per 1000 person-years among siblings, 6.29 among offspring, 2.01 among parents, 1.84 among carriers of variants of uncertain significance, and 4.43 among carriers of causative variants. Conclusions: The penetrance of aHUS seems a lot lower than previously reported. Moreover, the disease risk is higher in carriers of causative variants and is not equally distributed among generations: siblings and the offspring of patients have a much greater disease risk than parents. However, risk calculation may depend on variant classification that could change over time.

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