2 research outputs found
Low renal but high extrarenal phenotype variability in Schimke immuno-osseous dysplasia
Schimke immuno-osseous dysplasia (SIOD) is a rare multisystem disorder with
early mortality and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) progressing to
end-stage kidney disease. We hypothesized that next-generation gene panel
sequencing may unsurface oligosymptomatic cases of SIOD with potentially
milder disease courses. We analyzed the renal and extrarenal phenotypic
spectrum and genotype-phenotype associations in 34 patients from 28 families,
the largest SMARCAL1-associated nephropathy cohort to date. In 11 patients the
diagnosis was made unsuspectedly through SRNS gene panel testing. Renal
disease first manifested at median age 4.5 yrs, with focal segmental
glmerulosclerosis or minimal change nephropathy on biopsy and rapid
progression to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) at median age 8.7 yrs. Whereas
patients diagnosed by phenotype more frequently developed severe extrarenal
complications (cerebral ischemic events, septicemia) and were more likely to
die before age 10 years than patients identified by SRNS-gene panel screening
(88 vs. 40%), the subgroups did not differ with respect to age at proteinuria
onset and progression to ESKD. Also, 10 of 11 children diagnosed unsuspectedly
by Next Generation Sequencing were small at diagnosis and all showed
progressive growth failure. Severe phenotypes were usually associated with
biallelic truncating mutations and milder phenotypes with biallelic missense
mutations. However, no genotype-phenotype correlation was observed for the
renal disease course. In conclusion, while short stature is a reliable clue to
SIOD in children with SRNS, other systemic features are highly variable. Our
findings support routine SMARCAL1 testing also in non-syndromic SRNS